Saturday, 21 April 2012

Louis Theroux on autism


Louis Theroux on autism: A very different sort of school

Louis Theroux with students from the DLC Warren
With autism diagnoses rising more and more parents are plunged into a battle to understand the condition and find their child the right treatment, writes Louis Theroux.
Joey Morales-Ward is a 13-year-old kid who lives in suburban New Jersey. He likes playing on his computer, making books that he illustrates himself, and drawing in coloured chalk on his parents' front drive.
Joey also has violent tantrums on a daily basis, which often involve him hitting himself, punching holes in the walls all through the house, and assaulting his mother, leaving her bruised and shaken.
Joey has been diagnosed with autism.
People with autism vary widely in terms of their symptoms. Some are above average intellectually, though many are below average and struggle in mainstream schools.
Commonly, people on the autistic spectrum have trouble with social interaction - using speech, recognising emotions (their own and other people's), body language. They also often have repetitive behaviours and routines and can appear locked in their own worlds.
For reasons that aren't fully understood, diagnosis rates for autism have gone steadily upward in America in recent years. New Jersey is at the forefront of the trend. Latest figures put the autism rates among boys in New Jersey at one in 29 (rates for girls tend to be much lower).
Despite its increasing levels of diagnosis, autism is still poorly understood. Indeed, it is not clear if the real rates of autism are climbing. Some say there are more cases due to improved detection, or, some believe, an overly expanded set of criteria.
In the popular mind, the condition is forever linked to the Dustin Hoffman character in Rain Man, an autistic savant whose idiosyncratic behaviour - obsessive routines, strange vocal mannerisms - was offset by a host of "savant" abilities. He could memorise a phone book and beat the casinos in Las Vegas.
In fact, savant abilities are rare among those with autism.
For my part, my interest in the condition stemmed from an interest in the unique nature of the relationship between parents and their diagnosed kids.
Louis Theroux with JoeyParents of autistic children can find it a struggle to cope
Raising a child on the autistic spectrum presents a very demanding, though often rewarding, set of challenges.
As a father of two young boys, who are in psychiatric parlance "neuro-typical", I know first-hand how hard it can be when your four-year-old refuses to eat his vegetables or goes through weird phases of waking every few hours; the tantrums over certain clothes and the squabbles over who was playing with what first.
But raising a child with autism puts my stresses in the shade.
Carol has a cot next to Joey's bed where she sleeps most nights, to stop him getting out of bed and wandering around.
Children with autism sometimes sleep erratically into their teens. In terms of sleepless nights, many parents of diagnosed children remain in a kind of "newborn" mode for 10 or 15 years.
Language can develop incredibly slowly, or barely at all. Even sometimes, when the communication skills are there, an autistic child may seem to have no interest in communicating.
There can also be tantrums and outbursts.
It's not always clear what is causing a tantrum. It might be that a kid's playtime has been refused or brought to an end, but it might be something more obscure - a thought or a memory.
Nor is it always clear how best to handle a tantrum once it's started. When I first met them, Carol would lie on top of Joey to stop him from smashing up the place, sometimes in tandem with her husband Tadeo who would pin down his legs.
    A few weeks later, she implemented a new regime of giving him boxing gloves to soften his self-inflicted blows and keeping him in his room until the tantrum had blown over.
    As a TV presenter, the subject of autism also put me in a tricky position. I had to figure out how to get to know children, some of whom could only speak a handful of words, and whose way of interacting socially was very different to the ones I was used to.
    But this, in a way, was the point - that I should get a little glimpse of the strains, and the pleasures, of having a relationship with someone diagnosed with autism.
    On the positive side, kids on the spectrum can make massive strides in their progress, in rare cases losing the diagnosis entirely.
    With its high rates of autism, New Jersey is home to some of America's best services, including a remarkable school, the Developmental Learning Center in Warren, NJ. The DLC Warren lavishes resources on the 250 or so kids who go there, almost all of them diagnosed with autism. The teacher/student ratio is about 1/1.5.
    One of the children I met, Nicky Ingrassia, had been non-verbal until the age of six, and yet was now highly articulate, not to mention curious and humorous. Nicky had progressed to the point that he was being moved to a more mainstream school.
    But Nicky's level of progress is not the rule.
    Nicky Ingrassia turns the tables on Louis Theroux
    Just as typical was the story of the Englehard family.
    Josephine Englehard's son Brian was eight when he burned down the family house. As he grew older, he began assaulting Josephine, often when she refused him certain items of food. Sometimes he chased her around the house and pulled her hair out in clumps.
    After one particularly violent incident Josephine called the police. Brian was sent to a psychiatric hospital. From there, he moved to a group home where he still lives, aged 20.
    Brian spends Saturday and Sunday back in the family home. One Saturday I went with Josephine as she picked him up. Having heard so much about Brian's tantrums, I was a little nervous about meeting him.
    But over the course of the afternoon, using body language and a little bit of speech, Brian and I seemed to strike up a bit of a rapport. I found Brian outgoing, mischievous, and - especially after everything I'd heard about autism - surprisingly interested in me.
    Josephine told me that, although it had been a huge wrench moving Brian out of the house, he was now much calmer and seemingly much happier - a change she partly put down to the effect of the correct use of psychiatric medication.
    Sure enough, by the end of the visit, in the early evening, it was Brian who volunteered that he wanted to go back. In the car on the drive to the home, we listened to some merengue music on a Latin radio station, and the two of us grooved together sedately in the backseat.
    Joey's future remains uncertain.
    Carol says she is praying for a miracle for him, that he will somehow emerge from his autism.
    At the moment he is not on medication. Should his behaviour become even more disruptive as he gets bigger, Carol has resolved to try drugs as a first resort. If this doesn't help, a move to a group home like Brian's is not out of the question.
    In the end, I came away from my trip in New Jersey impressed, more than anything else, by the patience and love shown by the parents of the autistic children.
    The demands made of parents whose children are diagnosed with autism can be immense.
    Though Carol was praying for a miracle, in the course of spending time with her I felt she was performing a small miracle of her own simply by keeping going.
    An earlier version of this story incorrectly gave the ratio of teachers to students at DLC Warren as 1.5:1. The correct ratio is 1:1.5.
    Here is a selection of your comments.
    I feel for the parents, but especially I feel for the children. I have Asperger's Syndrome but was not diagnosed until I was well into my 50s. Growing up whilst rarely fitting in was hell. Increasing the awareness of the problems associated with autism needs to be handled carefully, many Aspies are not violent, just bewildered.
    Malcolm Midgley, Papamoa Beach, New Zealand
    So often autism is depicted as something where people are just a little strange but have huge abilities . In the majority of cases - and certainly amongst the parents of autistic children we know - it's more like having a 3-year-old in a 15-year-old's body . Life is difficult , sometimes violent and always stressful . Our son was an escapee - he would try and escape from the house and just run. Our house was like fort knox but he still got out. The last time he fell from the roof and broke his hip. Not exactly Rain Man is it ?
    Peter Little, Herne Bay
    My daughter was diagnosed at the age of two-and-a-half years old. Her speech came at the age of four, she could not pick up a pencil till the age of five. Presently she is studying at a normal school. She scores 80% to 90% marks in studies. She can understand everything. But her speech is not constructive. She cannot think in a different way. She is always withdrawn in nature.
    P P Pal, Uttarpara, West Bengal, India
    We are parents of three lovely, gorgeous boys. Our seven year-old is severely autistic and non-verbal but we all know that our efforts are worth it when we get a little bit of eye contact or a little smile or, on a really good day, a quick hug. The world can be a scary place for him, not knowing what to expect or what to do or how to act. But sometimes if you catch him really looking at something whether it's a flower or a ladybird or the leaves blowing in the wind - sometimes - it's good to look at things through his eyes. You realise that instead of rushing around just stop and really look at something and appreciate its beauty or its strangeness.
    Janis Cuthbert, Dunfermline
    As a perfectly verbal and expressive individual, I would like journalists to recognize that I AM on the spectrum. That the spectrum does not go from "genius, gifted, tragic, bit weird," to "sociopath, can't communicate,". It is a spectrum. We are as varied - and more so - than you could ever imagine. But no one wants to read stories of boring autistic people. I'm boring. I'm 22, I live at home with my family, I'm going to uni (again!) next year to do an arts subject, I have mates, I have hobbies, it's my fourth anniversary with my partner in June, and I don't hit people.
    Dee, Belfast
    My son was diagnosed with Aspergers Syndrome, but was badly misunderstood at school, with very distressing consequences. Anyway, he was so unhappy and home life was suffering to such an extent that we sent him to a private school. He loved it for a time and went to the top of his class until a teacher came along who wasn't so sympathetic. Again, we had the same problems so we took the monumental decision to take him out of school and have him home educated. Twelve years later, my son is at a top university studying physics with maths, two hundred miles away. He plays music in lots of groups and manages himself in the student accomodation without any support.

    Friday, 20 April 2012

    rickets death hospital inquiry


    Baby's parents demand rickets death hospital inquiry

    Rohan Wray and Channa Al-Alas said they felt like one doctor was accusing them of harming their child

    A young couple acquitted of murdering their four-month-old son have called for an inquiry into two London hospitals responsible for his care.
    Rohan Wray, 22, and Chana Al-Alas, 19, of London, were accused of abusing baby Jayden but his fractures were later found to have been caused by rickets.
    They told the BBC that the Great Ormond Street and University College hospitals should have diagnosed the disease.
    The hospitals have defended their care of Jayden before his death in 2009.
    A University College Hospital spokesman said its clinicians "acted with Jayden's interests at heart".
    "We regret that we were unable to reverse his deteriorating condition despite our intensive efforts in the short time he stayed with us. We would like to offer our sincere condolences to Jayden's parents," he said.

    Analysis

    It is difficult to hear of a more astonishing ordeal than that endured by the parents of baby Jayden.
    Accused of murdering their first child who died of natural causes, the couple had to suffer the shock of seeing their second baby taken away in the delivery room and taken into care.
    They were acquitted of murder at the Old Bailey last December but have not been able to speak until now due to their family court battle to have their baby daughter Jayda returned to them.
    That fight ended successfully on Thursday. For almost three years, they were treated as murder suspects not only by police and medical experts but also strangers in the street who recognised them from newspaper reports.
    Both parents want their story told and an inquiry held to help other innocent parents in similar circumstances.
    Solicitors and other medical experts say there are many other parents also accused of abuse and murder of children where rickets is later found to be the cause.
    Great Ormond Street said the rickets abnormalities had been less obvious to hospital radiologists than at the later autopsy and that it regretted the family's distressing time.
    Criminal charges against Jayden's parents were dropped in December 2011, after witnesses were unable to agree on the cause of the boy's death. But civil action was then taken by the local authority, Islington, which said Jayden had died from trauma inflicted on him by his parents.
    'Horrible two years' On Thursday, family court judge Mrs Justice Theis cleared Jayden's parents of responsibility for the death of their son and criticised the two hospitals for what she described as sub-optimal care.
    Jayden had a fractured skull and died from brain damage and swelling. He had been suffering from severe rickets, a disease caused by vitamin-D deficiency that causes bones to become soft.
    In their first broadcast interview, given to BBC Radio 4's Today programme, Jayden's mother and father voiced their anger at Great Ormond Street and University College hospitals.
    They described being asked at University College Hospital (UCH) if they knew how Jayden's injuries had occurred.
    "I said apart from him rolling over in his cot and hitting his head on the side of the bars I can't think of any other explanation because we haven't dropped him, nothing's dropped on him," Mr Wray said. "The look from them was that simply they didn't believe my explanation."
    Baby Jayden Four-month-old baby Jayden died three years ago
    The couple said they believed that Jayden would still be alive had his condition been correctly diagnosed at UCH and that they blamed both hospitals for his death.
    Ms Al-Alas said they were prevented from seeing Jayden after he was transferred to Great Ormond Street and later learned the hospital had spent four hours getting his injuries scanned.
    "He wasn't being treated then. They didn't know his brain readings - they wasn't checking that - they was just concentrating on getting the right pictures and he could've been treated then as well." Lessons needed to be learned, she said.
    Mr Wray said it had been a "horrible, horrible two years".
    "I really feel that they didn't really know what they were doing and they just pre-judged us way too early," he said. "You should actually be treated as innocent until proven guilty and not guilty until proven innocent."
    'Nightmare went on' In a statement, a Great Ormond Street Hospital spokesman said the decision to prosecute Jayden's parents was taken by the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) after rickets had been diagnosed following Jayden's death.
    "It is therefore fair to say that GOSH's radiological opinion was not the determining factor in that decision. Nor would a diagnosis of rickets at GOSH have altered the clinical outcome," he said.
    "It is not for the trust to decide legal issues of criminal responsibility. We never took any position on whether any specific person caused these injuries."
    A CPS spokesman said: "In bringing this prosecution we considered all of the evidence in detail and our policy on non-accidental head injuries, and were satisfied that there was a realistic prospect of conviction. There was no criticism of the CPS by the judge for bringing this case."
    In her High Court ruling, Mrs Justice Theis said she could not be satisfied "on the balance of probabilities" that any of the fractures or the "traumatised fissure" were "as a result of inflicted deliberate harm caused to Jayden by either of these parents".
    Mrs Justice Theis concluded that more research was needed on the impact of vitamin D deficiency and rickets on babies aged under six months.
    The couple's daughter, who has been in the care of Islington since her birth in October 2010, has now been returned to them.

    Friday, 30 March 2012


    Respect Party candidate George Galloway polled more than 18,000 votes

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    Respect Party candidate George Galloway has taken the Bradford West parliamentary seat from Labour, winning the by-election by 10,100 votes.
    Mr Galloway, expelled by Labour in 2003, said it was the "most sensational victory" in by-election history. He received 18,341 votes - a 56% share.
    He said his victory represented a "total rejection" of the major parties.
    At the 2010 General Election, Labour's Marsha Singh, who resigned on health grounds, won with a majority of 5,763 .
    The party had held the West Yorkshire seat since 1974, except for a brief period in the 1980s when the sitting MP defected to the SDP.
    Labour candidate Imran Hussein came second with 8,201 votes as the party's share of the vote was 20% down on its 2010 figure.
    'Bradford spring'
    Conservative candidate Jackie Whiteley was third, with 2,746 votes. Jeanette Sunderland, of the Liberal Democrats, secured 1,505 votes.
    Mr Galloway, who co-founded the anti-war Respect Party after being expelled by Labour because of comments he made as part of his opposition to the Iraq war, said the result represented the "Bradford 

    Tuesday, 27 March 2012

    NHS ageism


    NHS ageism 'harming elderly care'

    Hands of an elderly lady The report calls for better training in the treatment of elderly people
    The elderly are being passed around hospitals in England like parcels, often going without treatment because of ageist attitudes, a report suggests.
    The King's Fund review said treatable conditions such as incontinence and depression were sometimes ignored.
    And even diseases like cancer and heart disease were not always tested for, it suggested.
    A Department of Health spokesman said addressing problems with elderly care was a key priority for the NHS.
    He added the reforms being introduced in the health service were designed to free staff from the obstacles they were facing to putting patients first.
    The report - based on patient surveys and evidence from staff - is the latest in a series of critical reports on elderly care.
    The Patients Association and Care Quality Commission have both recently published studies detailing "shocking" standards.
    The problem has prompted the Royal College of Nursing to call for minimum staffing levels for elderly care.
    'Bed blocker' This study by the King's Fund criticised the whole approach to elderly care, saying the attitudes and language used suggested staff - particularly doctors - were ageist.

    “Start Quote

    The health and social care system system has failed to keep pace with changing health needs”
    End Quote Jocelyn Cornwell Report author
    It highlighted the uses of phrases such as "bed blocker" as well as the fact the elderly did not always receive the same assessments and treatments as younger patients.
    But the think tank also laid the blame on the system, pointing out the volumes of work and pressure on meeting targets was compromising care.
    It said elderly patients, who make up two-thirds of admissions, often found themselves on the wrong wards and passed around "like parcels" because of the rush to admit them.
    The King's Fund called for better training for staff, leadership and involvement of patients to ensure the co-ordination of care improved.
    Report author Jocelyn Cornwell said: "The health and social care system system has failed to keep pace with changing health needs.
    "It needs a radical rethink from top to bottom."
    Michelle Mitchell, from Age UK, added: "Health services cannot deliver high-quality services unless older people are treated as individuals and their care is co-ordinated.
    "This is what a modern health service needs to deliver."

    Monday, 19 March 2012

    Home care for elderly branded 'shocking and disgraceful'

    Home care for elderly branded 'shocking and disgraceful'

    Which? found cases of missed visits, food left out of reach, medication not given and people being left in soiled beds during its investigation.It concluded too many faced a "constant battle" to just get the basic help.The UK Home Care Association said it was never acceptable for people to experience rushed or inadequate care.Which? said the findings - based on a survey and diaries kept by the elderly - showed the system needed reform.
    More than 500,000 people rely on help at home with activities such as washing and dressing.
    Elderly personFunding squeeze
    These include both people who get council-funded care and those who pay for it themselves.
    While Which? said there were some examples of excellent care, it claimed too many were being poorly served.
    The group asked 30 people to keep diaries over the course of a week detailing their experiences.One elderly lady was left alone in the dark for hours unable to find food or drink.
    Another was left without a walking frame so she was unable to get to the bathroom and one man was not given vital medication for his diabetes.
    The poll, of nearly 1,000 people, found one of the most common complaints was missed or rushed visits.
    Nearly half of respondents said visits had been missed in the last six months with most not being warned in advance.
    One daughter said: "They missed a day just after Christmas. I covered, but mum didn't contact me until early evening by which time she needed a lot of cleaning up.
    "You wonder about the elderly with no relatives."
    Which? said the situation was only likely to get worse as councils increasingly squeeze funding.
    'Real crisis'
    This report is just the latest in a series that has highlighted the struggle the elderly are facing.
    At the end of last year the Equality and Human Rights Commission said standards were so bad they even breached human rights.
    Which? executive director Richard Lloyd said: "Our investigation found some disgraceful examples of care with elderly people given little time or respect.
    "The government can no longer claim to be shocked as report after report highlights the pitiful state of care for older people."
    And Michelle Mitchell, of Age UK, said the system was putting the "health and dignity of older people at risk".
    The UK Home Care Association, which represents the agencies which provide many of the services, said its members were increasingly under pressure to cut the length of visits by councils wanting to save money.
    Mike Padgham, the group's chairman, said: "The report supports our growing concern over state-funded homecare.
    "People and their families must be confident that they will receive dignified and effective care.
    "They must look to government and local councils to place the needs of elderly and disabled people at the forefront in the current economic climate, to avoid the concerning picture described in today's report."
    Councillor David Rogers, of the Local Government Association, said: "This research highlights the very real crisis this country is facing in providing care for the elderly and vulnerable.
    "We know there isn't enough money in the system and without fundamental reform the situation is only going to get worse and stories like this will sadly become increasingly common."
    The government has promised to publish plans this year to overhaul the system in England. One of the aims of the forthcoming changes is to create a fairer and better-funded system.
    The other parts of the UK are also looking at their systems.
    Even in Scotland, where care is provided free, services are having to be rationed to only those who are the most in need because finances are stretched.


    The care worker's story

    "I've been in this profession for 10 years. This agency doesn't pay for travelling time so it's rush, rush, rush and the time I spend travelling is taken from each customer."
    "Fifteen-minute visits used to be check calls or to give medication. Now they're used to microwave a meal, empty a commode and travel to the next person. It's impossible."

    Thursday, 1 March 2012

    BBC News... Being compassionate should be as important as being clever


    Overhaul in approach to elderly care 'needed'

    Elderly patientNursing standards have been criticised in a series of reports

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    Being compassionate should be as important as being clever when it comes to the recruitment of staff to care for the elderly, experts say.
    The recommendation was one of a series made by the Commission on Improving Dignity in Care for Older People to improve standards in hospitals and care homes in England.
    The group said too many vulnerable people were currently being "let down".
    The review comes after a series of critical reports into elderly care.
    Cases of neglect have been documented by the likes of the Health Service Ombudsman and Patients Association in the past year.
    And so the commission was set up by Age UK, the NHS Confederation and the Local Government Association to set out a blueprint for how the NHS and social care sector should tackle the issue.
    Patronising language
    In total, the commission published 48 draft recommendations which will be consulted on over the next month before a final action plan is published in the summer.
    The measures cover issues such as making dignity a priority at board level, encouraging staff at all levels to challenge bad practice and ensuring patronising language, such as "old dear", is not used.
    The report said language which denigrates older people should be as unacceptable as racist or sexist terms.
    Another key recommendation involved the role of ward sisters, which the report said should be given the authority by management to take action when standards slip.
    But it is the issue of staff training which there will be most focus on. There have been suggestions in the past that nurse training has become too academic.
    Some places have started to trial ways of testing the emotional intelligence and bedside manner of students.
    The commission said it should become commonplace for universities and professional bodies to take into account compassionate values as much as they do qualifications.
    One of the authors of the report, Sir Keith Pearson, told BBC Radio 4's Today programme that dignity was "the essence of proper nursing".
    He said: "There are pockets within the NHS and the care home sector where we are seeing excellent care. But you can go to hospitals...and you can see a couple of wards where dignity has broken down."
    Sir Keith said there were clearly some nurses and professional carers who held old people "in contempt", adding: "Recruiting for values and then training for skills is enormously important."
    He said people considering a career in nursing needed to be aware that 60% of patients in hospitals were over the age of 65 and they needed to be able to show compassion and kindness to elderly patients.
    Sir Keith conceded that those nurses and carers who could not adapt to this "root and branch" change to the system would have to go.
    But Peter Carter, general secretary of the Royal College of Nursing, suggested the most important factor when it came to standards was ensuring there were enough staff.
    "It is absolutely critical that hospitals and care homes employ safe numbers of nurses with the correct skill mix. This is the key challenge that must be met."
    Roswyn Hakesley-Brown, of the Patients Association, said the recommendations were a "step forward".
    But she added without action on the ground it would be of no comfort to the people "who contact our helpline every day to tell us their loved ones are being left without adequate pain relief, are not being helped to eat and drink or who are left to lie in their own faeces because a nurse says she is too busy to help them to the toilet".
    Care services minister Paul Burstow said the commission had made some good recommendations and he would be looking to work with the group to improve standards.

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