Showing posts with label Living Options for People with Disabilities. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Living Options for People with Disabilities. Show all posts

Monday, June 10, 2013

Adaptive Restraints for Transporting Special Needs Children

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Thursday, July 7, 2011

Access Travel Ireland: Special Needs Kids Bus Travel-Dublin Airport to Waterford

An extremely wonderful Irish gentleman directed me to take the Aircoach Bus from Dublin to Waterford.  Great tip, this bus was much less expensive than the train and more convenient then I knew.


Aircoach Bus (Dublin to Waterford)  

Friday, December 10, 2010

Katie Bekett - Independent Living


It started with a 3-year-old girl in a hospital and the president who was angered when he learned that federal rules prevented her from going home.
By what sense do we have a regulation in government that says we'll pay $6,000 a month to keep someone in a hospital that we believe would be better off at home, but the family cannot afford one-sixth that amount to keep them at home?
The president was Ronald Reagan. The girl, Katie Beckett, had contracted viral encephalitis, a brain infection, when she was just five months old. She'd gone into a coma for ten days, and when she came out she suffered a paralysis that left her unable to breathe without the help of a ventilator most of the day.
After more than two years living in St. Luke's Methodist Hospital in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, the family reached the limit of what its private insurance would pay for Katie's care. Medicaid, the state and federal health insurance for the needy, started picking up the cost of that expensive breathing machine and other care.
But Medicaid would pay only as long as the little girl lived in the pediatric intensive care unit at the hospital.
Beckett's parents, Julie and Mark, said they wanted their daughter at home. The girl's doctors agreed, saying she needed to grow up in a more normal environment than a hospital room.

Independent Living - Alternative Options

The following is an article from NPR:
What do you think -  Should a 22 year old be living in a Nursing Home???
After a year in a nursing home, Mathew Harp got his wish and moved out. He now lives in an Atlanta neighborhood with a woman who provides his attendant care.


Click "read more" to read article

Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Home Help Services for the developmentally disabled


HOME HELP SERVICES
Are you concerned about taking care of yourself and continuing to live in your own home?



Are you eligible for Medicaid?
This program may let you hire someone to help you with your essential daily activities.

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