American Association of People with
Disability Daily – Tuesday, 3 December 2013
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NATIONAL
Veterans court program helps warriors
battle addiction, mental health crises.
The Washington Post (12/2) by Melinda
Henneberger
Former Marine Cpl. Eric Gonzales doesn’t
remember much about the night last year he led police in Orange County, Calif.,
on a high-speed, 26-minute chase that ended when he threw his truck into
reverse and crashed into the patrol car behind him.
When he finally took his foot off the
gas, he was handcuffed and later charged with DUI, evading arrest, assault on a
police officer and more.
Still in the Marine Corps at the time,
and living at Camp Pendleton, Gonzales’s first court appearance was brief; he
argued with the judge and got himself ejected.
But then he finally listened to his
counsel: “My lawyer recommended I go to veterans court” — one of a growing
number of such programs that oversee criminal cases involving military veterans
who were arrested at least partly because of an addiction or mental illness,
most commonly depression and post-traumatic stress disorder.
An average of 22 military veterans commit
suicide every day in this country, perhaps the best measure of the mental
health crisis among veterans. And 130 special courts for veterans in 40 states
are tackling that problem.
The first one was started in Buffalo in
2008, modeled on the drug courts that have significantly reduced recidivism
rates by substituting treatment and other support programs for incarceration.
Gonzales, who served in Afghanistan in
2009 and 2010, was facing a nine-year prison sentence, so he was eager to opt
for oversight from Judge Wendy Lindley’s veterans court in Orange County. He
“graduated” from the program in September.
On Monday, the 23-year-old stepped up to
a podium in a ballroom at Washington’s Marriott Wardman Park hotel and
addressed a crowd of about 900 as the first speaker at the first national
training conference for those who work in such courts.
Gonzales, a high school sports star from
San Bernardino, had a college scholarship but persuaded his parents to sign the
waiver that let him enlist at 17: “I joined the greatest fighting force I could
— the United States Marine Corps!” he said, to a big round of hoo-rahs from Marines
in the crowd.
But while serving in Afghanistan, he saw
the man who had been “like a father” to him blown up by an improvised explosive
device. So once he was back home, Gonzales told the crowd, he began drinking
heavily and was “shocked at the truth of the beast.” He skipped the specifics
but said, “I had fallen off my white horse.”
Through the veterans court, he started to
work on his problems instead of masking them: “I did mindfulness, PTSD and
exposure therapy — which . . . really do
work, actually.”
After he spoke at the conference, a
succession of big names did, too: “He’s what it’s all about,’’ retired Army
Gen. Barry McCaffrey said of Gonzales. “We’ve got this battle force that kept
us safe since 9/11; now we’ve got to stay behind them.’’
After the program, Gonzales’s former drug
court parole officer, Bert Eitner, came up to congratulate him.
During his first week in Afghanistan,
Gonzales’s base was attacked by a suicide bomber; two Marines were killed. The
later loss of his mentor, Sgt. Maj. Robert Cottle, who was killed by a
300-pound explosive device, was hard — as were orders from his superiors that
prevented Gonzales from quickly retrieving the body.
“That’s what broke my mind,’’ he said.
After returning home in May 2010, “we’d
only discuss when we were drunk who died.”
The veterans court doesn’t take men and
women on active duty, Eitner said, “because there’s no point giving them all
these services and then letting them go back to deployment.”
“If you mess up,’’ Gonzales said the
judge told him, “you’re going to prison.” Instead, he lived in a residential
treatment center. He meditated, worked out, did cognitive therapy, underwent
exposure therapy — in which he was taken back to his mentor’s death again and
again— and attended every 12-step meeting he could.
Asked whether he was tested regularly for
drugs and alcohol, Eitner and Gonzales burst out laughing. Six times a week by
Eitner alone, Gonzales said, “even though I was already peeing for four other
people.”
Since graduating from the program three
months ago, he’s back in school, studying audio engineering and getting some
work, too, while living with his parents and advocating for the program that he
feels saved his life.
Both Gonzales’s problem and his progress
are pretty typical of what Eitner sees, he said, in a program that has a
recidivism rate of 3 percent. “This guy,’’ Eitner said of his former charge,
“was sent someplace no one should ever be sent, but that’s what we do to our
kids because they’re good at it. And you can’t strap a gun on every day and
have it not affect you.”
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STATE/LOCAL
Teen's death by cop illustrates failure
of mental health system. SunSentinel (12/2) by Ben Wolford
BOYNTON BEACH — There were only so many
ways to calm down Michael Camberdella, and his parents had tried them all that
morning a year ago.
So as her son's meltdown grew
increasingly violent and he went to fetch weapons, Linda Camberdella resorted
to her last option. She dialed 911.
The previous two times she called
deputies, Michael was calm by the time they arrived. She explained to the cops
that although Michael was a teenager, he had the mind of a 5-year-old. His
disorders made him volatile, and he was on a waiting list for residential
mental-health treatment.
But things were different on Oct. 4,
2012, when Deputy William Goldstein arrived at Camberdella's home. Michael
wasn't calm. He wielded a garden pruner and a rubber mallet. Goldstein fired.
Linda screamed and collapsed on the lawn. Michael, 18, died by the stop sign,
clutching his chest as his father Irving ran outside.
"Save my son!" Linda cried, but
there was nothing anyone could do.
In Florida, mental health advocates say
resources for parents and mentally ill individuals are tragically lacking. In
the vacuum of an adequate system, law enforcement officers become case workers,
courts triage the defendants and jails act as hospitals.
"We don't care enough about mental
health in this state," said Gary Levine, a social worker in the Broward County
Public Defender's Office.
Florida spends a third of what the
average state does, $39.55, on mental health for each resident, according to
the National Association of State Mental Health Program Directors Research
Institute.
Families affected by mental illness know
what that small investment feels like, advocates say. The Department of
Children & Families estimates that Florida's mental health system meets
only 34 percent of adults' mental health needs and 27 percent of children's
mental health needs.
Police, jails and desperate 911 calls
fill the void.
The Camberdella family declined to
comment for this article, as did their attorney, Sean Domnick. Domnick's firm
has pursued a wrongful death lawsuit against the sheriff's office on their
behalf, a case that's ongoing.
Their story has been compiled from the
hundreds of sheriff's office documents produced during the investigation of
Michael's death. They reveal some of the efforts the Camberdellas made to get
help for their son, as well as their desperation.
Michael was a typically friendly
teenager. He attended high school, but his IQ was 47, his family has said. He
had autism and several mental illnesses, including bipolar disorder, according
to sheriff's office records. Despite his slight, 130-pound frame, he was prone
to violent outbursts, once punching a hole through the wall. Another time a few
years ago, he broke at least one of his father's ribs, Linda Camberdella said
in the investigation.
But Michael acknowledged his own temper
and told a deputy he was working on it. To calm down, he often listened to
music or played video games.
His family sought residential therapy,
but often there are waiting lists, both for beds and for funding. In a 2011
police report, Linda Camberdella told a deputy Michael was in line for a group
home.
In the months and days before his death,
Michael's health seemed to deteriorate. He fell and injured himself at a Publix
and spent time at a hospital. Then his girlfriend broke up with him, and he
took it hard. The family sought help from a psychiatrist.
"His depression kicked in,"
Linda Camberdella told a detective. "He told his doctor that he was having
thoughts of suicide."
On the morning he died, he woke up angry.
His iPod was missing, and it enraged him. Though the 911 tape was destroyed
after 90 days, per sheriff's office policy, the dispatcher's partial quotes,
included in a report, narrate Michael's behavior.
"…the son has the mom on a choke
lock."
"…he does have a hammer and a tree
trimmer."
"…she's saying that he will freak
out once a deputy approaches him."
When Deputy Goldstein arrived, those were
the things he knew: A crime was in progress.
Like most deputies in Palm Beach County
(and unlike most in Broward), Goldstein was Crisis Intervention Team certified,
which means he was taught how to defuse tense situations with mentally ill
subjects. "The training encourages police to offer a more humane and calm
approach to handling these individuals," Sheriff Ric Bradshaw wrote
recently.
But as he stood by his car in the street,
gun drawn and ordering Michael to drop his weapons, Goldstein's
self-preservation instincts took over, he told investigators.
"Pretty much I felt like I was gonna
die if I didn't shoot him," he said.
Michael did drop his weapons, but he kept
advancing. He reached into his waistband, pulled out something small and black
and cocked his arm to throw, Goldstein said.
---
'Quiet' Santa Events a Coup for Autistic
Kids. ABC News (12/3) by Joanna Prisco
The twinkling lights, booming carolers
and long lines of kids waiting to sit on Santa's knee are all part of an annual
ritual for some mall-goers. But for children with autism, those same holiday
staples can be overwhelming triggers for stress.
"Our son, Jackson, is severely
affected by autism and is nonverbal with multiple other special needs,"
said J-Jaye Hurley, who lives in Atlanta. "We had not been able to get a
picture with Santa since he was 2."
Fortunately, in the past few years, more
and more shopping centers are beginning to offer alternative events for
families who have children with special sensitivities, or needs. When Hurley
learned of the Caring Santa program in the Noerr, Abilitypath and Simon Malls
near her home, "for the first time, our family was able to visit Santa,
get a great pic, and Jackson really was relaxed and happy to be there,"
she said. This year will mark the Hurley's third trip to see St. Nick.
The Caring Santa program and other
similar series around the country, such as Silent Santa or Sensitive Santa,
strip down the typical meet 'n' greet with Mr. Claus to something
straightforward and peaceful. The result is quieter, with smaller crowds and
less stimuli.
"There's no reason why ASD [autism
spectrum disorder] children shouldn't be able to have the same opportunities as
other kids, and this gives them the chance to participate in a holiday
custom," said Dr. Max Wiznitzer, a neurologist specializing in autism at
University Hospitals' Rainbow Babies and Children's Hospital in Cleveland.
"If you remove the excessive sensory input for the children, their
behavior will be better, they will get more out of it and it's a win-win."
According to U.S. Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, one in 88 children is on the autism spectrum. Awareness
has lead to increasing modifications at movie theaters, theme parks and other
social activity locales to limit sensory overload.
The same considerations can be made when
approaching the holidays, said Wiznitzer.
"If you're going to go to a church
service, holiday party or shopping, you need to create gradual exposure to the
songs that will be played, or offer earplugs," he said. "There are
going to be lots of strange noises and people coming through, so part of it is
also keeping things quick. Don't spend three hours at your events. Recognize
when the child's had enough so that it doesn't lead to meltdowns, tantrums and
negative impressions from other people."
For Hurley, who is also an autism
response team coordinator for Autism Speaks, an autism science and advocacy
organization, keeping those kinds of tips in mind and seeking out sensitive
environments such as Caring Santa has made a significant difference in her
overall holiday experience.
"Not all children with autism need a
program like this," she said. "But for so many families like mine, we
are very thankful."
---
INTERNATIONAL
Disability History Month: Unpacking
medieval myths. BBC News (12/3) by Emma Tracey
Delving into disabled people's social
history can help us understand modern attitudes to disability, argues Richard
Rieser, coordinator of the UK's annual Disability History Month.
Richard Rieser, former teacher and
equality champion, says the aim of Disability History Month is "to
celebrate the achievements of disabled people, to look at the disablism and
oppression that we've been subjected to over time in all sorts of cultures and
to argue for the full equality that we are entitled to under human rights
legislation".
With the Fourth DHM in full swing,
physically disabled Rieser shares his controversial views on disability studies
degrees, disabled people in the current political climate and why DHM is
important in 2013.
What does the DHM logo mean?
Our symbol is the black triangle that
people, including many disabled men and women, had to wear under the Nazis to
designate that they were unsociable. We've turned it around to reclaim it and
surrounded it with a yellow circle and our slogans.
It's reclaiming the worst part of our
history, when more than a million disabled people were murdered in Europe
between 1937 and 1946.
When did you become interested in the
history of disabled people?
I first got involved in 1990, when I
wrote a book about it for the Inner London Education Authority. Parents were
demanding something about the history of disabled people in the area, because
lots of equality work had already been done on race, gender and class.
Then in 1994, I ran a conference with
Save the Children on why writers, cartoonists and anyone who portrayed children
either left disabled kids out completely, or their characters with disabilities
were negative. We explored where those stereotypes came from.
It seemed a shame that this and other
work had been done but was not being applied anywhere. Disability History Month
is a good platform for it.
Don't disability studies courses teach
people about the history of disabled people?
Rieser - focusing on the practical
One of my concerns with disability
studies degrees, is that most of what people are learning about can't be turned
into concrete knowledge to improve the general public's understanding of
disability. It seems to be very much about phenomenology and post-modernism,
which pass most people on the street by.
I don't mind if that's the theoretical
framework people use but they should be coming out (of the course) able to say,
"the accessibility of transport networks has improved for disabled people
by this much", or that it hasn't.
Nobody seems to be interested in that
sort of practical research. In a way, Disability History Month is a conduit for
people who want to publicise the practical effects of their research into the
lives of disabled people.
How does DHM publicise such research?
This year we did a series of eight
interviews with medieval historian Irina Metzler, where she unpacks some of the
myths about the way disabled people were treated during that period. The
stereotype was that disabled people were saints, or sinners whose only
redemption was to go on pilgrimage to holy shrine. There's written evidence of
550 miracles in that period but there's also evidence that the vast majority of
pilgrims returned in the state that they went.
What was the real situation for disabled
people in medieval times?
Metzler says that disabled people were
just part of the community. There was a very strong Christian charitable notion
towards us. The local community supported people who couldn't fend for
themselves and as a fall back, there were monasteries, convents and churches
which provided support. This system broke down with the Reformation. When the
care of disabled people passed to the state, from the first poor laws in 1388
onwards. You see this distinction between the worthy poor and the unworthy
poor. As we were the worthy poor, it was always thought that many of us were
faking it. It's a theme that you can see in The Sun and other newspapers today.
Why does DHM take place between 22
November and 22 December?
It was about finding a space in the
calendar. We thought we'd have an irregular month, from the third week of
November up to Christmas. The period covers International Aids Day on 1
December, the International Day of Disabled People on 3 December and
International Human Rights Day on the tenth.
How did DHM get started?
Back in 2010, the organiser of LGBT
History Month and the advisor on race equality suggested to me that we also
needed a Disability History month. I put out feelers and within a very short
time, 24 organisations including the TUC, disability coalitions and Scope, said
they'd support us.
We held our first event at the Institute
of Education, where we launched an oil painting on the history of the struggle
for inclusive education. The concept was just then coming under attack, with
the government challenging the bias towards inclusion. We can now say, four
years on, that there has been a real attempt to force (disabled) people out of
mainstream schools and colleges.
Why 2010?
Because of the change of government. Not
that New Labour were particularly good but at least we had the commitment from
the cabinet office, the Prime Minister's report on the position of disabled
people and the setting up of Equality 2025, which provided a target date to
reach full equality for disabled people. As soon as there'd been a change of
government, all of that was pushed out of the way.
We needed to gather people together to
help them understand the huge struggles that we as disabled people had gone
through to get any modicum of equality, including 17 attempts to get the
disability discrimination act into law. We needed something for people to
realise that the job hadn't been done yet and that we still needed to go on
struggling. And we wanted to analyse where the negative attitudes (towards
disabled people), still very prominent in society, came from.
Why did you choose independent living
this year?
We felt that with all the cutbacks taking
place, both in local authority and central government funding, the struggle for
independent living needed to be better understood by a wider number of people.
They need to know what's at stake for disabled people if their support gets
taken away.
What will 2014's theme be?
We think that next year we're going to
look at portrayal over periods of time, including pictures, architecture, sculpture
and moving image media.
How has DHM progressed since 2010?
All sorts of people around the country
are putting on Disability History Month events. There are 60 listed on our
website for 2013, in 2012 there were 80.
The amount of interest depends on which
unions and big organisations get involved. Last year, the National Union of
Students became very involved. This year, the National Union of Teachers
sponsored some work we did to help raise issues of disability in the classroom,
which is now on their website.
How can people celebrate Disability
History Month?
We are just a group of people making this
happen. We get no funding and we don't have the energy or resources to organise
lots of events all over the country.
If you decide to put on an event, we'll
list it on the website and we can provide you with posters, broadsheets,
postcards, badges and speakers.
Follow @BBCOuch on Twitter and on
Facebook, and listen to our monthly talk show
---
Awareness-raising calendar
January, Holocaust day and events around
that
February is LGBT history month
March is International Women's Month
June is Travellers Month
October, Black History Month
Two weeks of anti-bullying
awareness-raising at the beginning of November
---
Disability History month themes
2010, education
2011, disability struggles of the past
2012, hate crime
2013, celebrating our struggle for
independent living: no return to institutional isolation
---
More disability history features
Arthur MacMorrough Kavanagh
The sword-thrower with no limbs (May,
2013)
The deaf astronomer and the 'dark body'
(Nov, 2012)
Arthur MacMorrough Kavanagh (Nov, 2012)
Was Tamerlane disabled? (Nov, 2012)
Enrico Dandolo and the way history
overlooks disability (Nov, 2012)
---
Mental health activist wants U.S.
vice-president to intervene in Ellen Richardson case.
Toronto Star (11/29) by Valerie Hauch
A Toronto mental health activist wants
U.S. Vice-President Joe Biden to get involved in the case of a city woman whose
mental health medical record prevented her entry to the U.S.
The case of a Toronto disabled woman who
was denied entry to the U.S. and missed out on a 10-day cruise because a 2012
“mental health episode’’ came up on the computer of a U.S. border agent has
spurred long-time mental health issues advocate Bill Wilkerson into action.
The Toronto chair of Mental Health
International is getting a letter he’s written hand-delivered to U.S.
Vice-President Joe Biden on Monday, in which he’s asking Biden to get involved
in the case of Ellen Richardson who has been “locked out of America.’’
Richardson, who suffers from clinical
depression, “exhibits courage to be celebrated, not persecuted,’’ says
Wilkerson, who suggests that Biden find out what “policy and training
questions’’ need to be addressed so situations like this don’t occur again.
He thinks police should create a separate
“public health’’ database so that information from non-criminal investigations,
like attempted suicides, are not put into the same database that is shared with
U.S. authorities.
Information from police investigations,
even non-criminal events like suicide, can go into the Canadian Police
Information Centre (CPIC) a central police database. The CPIC database is
managed by the RCMP, which shares it with the FBI.
Richardson’s MP, Mike Sullivan agrees
there should “be limits’’ on what police share that is not related to criminal
activity, like mental health information gathered in response to something like
an attempted suicide.
“And what about all those cardings’’ that
police do in Toronto?’’ Sullivan asked, wondering if that information is also
going into a police database.
“Canadians do have a greater sense of
personal privacy than in the U.S.,’’ he said.
Richardson, a paraplegic, had been
admitted to hospital in June 2012 for treatment of clinical depression
following a “half-hearted’’ suicide attempt in 2012 related to a personal
relationship break-up. Richardson had taken a few pills but then stopped
herself. Her mother called 911 and she was taken to hospital. She had also
written a suicide letter which, she says, her mother has told her was turned
over to police.
She had previously made a more serious
attempt at suicide in 2001, as a result of delusions, and later wrote about
this experience in a book published in 2008.
But the only incident mentioned by the
U.S. border agent was the one in 2012, says Richardson, who was told that
because of the “mental illness episode’’ — noted in a document handed to her by
the border agent — she would need a medical evaluation by one of only three
Ontario doctors, approved by U.S. authorities, before she could cross.
From 2001 to the 2012 incident,
Richardson says she had been on medication that had kept her stable. And since
being treated for clinical depression following the 2012 incident, her
condition has again stabilized.
Ontario’s Privacy Commissioner Ann
Cavoukian has launched an investigation into how information about Richardson’s
mental health record came to the attention of a U.S. Customs and Border
Protection agent when she went to Pearson airport.
“My office will investigate this matter
vigorously to ensure that the personal health information of Ontarians is not
being disclosed in a manner that contravenes Ontario’s health privacy
legislation,’’ Cavoukian said Friday.
MPP France Gélinas, NDP health and
long-term care critic, had written to Cavoukian, asking for the Information and
Privacy Commissioner to look into the case of Richardson, after reading a
Toronto Star story.
Cavoukian also said that her office has
contacted “the Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care to confirm that there has
been no disclosure of personal health information to the U.S. Customs and
Border Protection by health information custodians in Ontario.
A spokesperson for provincial Health
Minister Deb Matthews told the Star that no Ontario health record information
is shared. “U.S. authorities do not have access to medical or other health
records for Ontarians travelling to the U.S.,’’ said Samantha Grant, Matthews’
press secretary, adding that she could not provide any further information.
A spokesman for the Office of the Privacy
Commissioner of Canada said the federal office is looking into it to determine
“next steps. To be clear, at this point we have not launched an official
investigation,’’ said Scott Hutchinson.
---
Entrepreneurship on Wheels: The Story of
a Café for Albanian Youths with Disabilities. Huffington Post (12/2) by Saskia
Bruysten
On a Saturday morning, Suela, like every
other young twenty-something Albanian, has plans for the weekend. In a nation
addicted to coffee, one of her favorite pastimes is having a drink with a
friend in one of Tirana's hundreds of cafes.
However, getting there is challenging for
a young woman in a wheelchair.
Around 137,000 people in Albania are
affected by disability, which amounts to approximately 4.3% of the country's
population. Young people with disabilities in Albania face many problems
including mobility, stigmatization and isolation.
Albania is one of the poorest countries
in Europe. While economic growth over the last decade has markedly improved the
quality of life in urban areas, provisions for people with disabilities still
lag behind.
According to the World Bank, disabled
people in Albania face serious problems accessing quality services with trained
staff. They also suffer from isolation and solitude, stigmatization,
unemployment and poverty. The public system simply fails to accommodate for the
unique needs of the disabled people; accessibility is difficult in public
places and the education system still uses obsolete methods.
Suela and her friends decided to do
something about it. They want to create a café in Tirana where young people
with disabilities can also enjoy opportunities to work, easily and comfortably
socialize with friends and enjoy cultural activities.
Furthermore, the café should foster the
spirit of inclusion and to create an opportunity for non-disabled people to
appreciate how joyful, inspiring and unique the life of a disabled person can
be.
The business concept for E Jona Café was
born.
E Jona will be built purposely in order
to be accessible for both disabled and non-disabled young people, offering a
range of attractions such as the display of artwork and craftwork, musical
performances, theatre evenings, jewelry making training, sign language and
braille courses, etc.
The café will serve cakes, cookies,
sandwiches and other light snacks, as well as a range of barista coffees, teas
and soft drinks.
Furthermore, the shop will employ six
young people with disabilities to work as managers, bartenders, waiters and
helpers. The profits earned by E Jona will be reinvested into improving the
program of events at the café.
Armed with a business plan, Suela and her
friends applied to the National Social Business Competition hosted by Yunus
Social Business Albania, the local office of Nobel Peace Prize Laureate
Muhammad Yunus' social business incubator fund. The business plan beat off
tough competition from more than 50 other contestants to win the competition.
The final was even featured on Albanian national TV.
E Jona has been approved for investment
from YSB. It is currently fundraising for $45,950 start-up capital on YSB's
partner website. Kiva is a platform where anyone from around the world can lend
to social entrepreneurs and microfinance borrowers with amounts as little as
$25. Each loan has a schedule detailing the dates when the entrepreneur will
pay back the loan in installments. Lenders can receive repayments into their
online account, which they can use to invest in other entrepreneurs.
In the meantime, an airy premise on a
trendy street in Tirana has been rented and renovations are going full speed
ahead.
Suela is looking forward to the day the
café opens. It will be a place open for all young people, wheels or no wheels.
Lend to E Jona here.
Follow E Jona here.
Find out more about Yunus Social Business
here.
Follow Saskia Bruysten on Twitter:
www.twitter.com/saskiabruysten
---
How India's Miss Wheelchair winners are
overcoming challenge. BBC News (12/3) by Vikas Pandey
Neenu Kewlani is a communications
professional and works for disability rights in India.
To secure more rights for people with
disabilities, she makes frequent visits to courtrooms where the world of beauty
contests is but a dream.
But the first Miss Wheelchair India
contest in Mumbai in late November changed much of that.
She found herself amid the humdrum of the
green room, glitter of the stage and the usual chatter one associates with a
beauty pageant.
But there were some marked differences -
the stage was much smaller than the ones set up for Miss India pageant and the contestants
were treated as winners even before the event started.
Ms Kewlani's reply is an emphatic
"no" when asked if the smaller stage and venue dimmed the importance
of India's first Miss Wheelchair contest.
"Nobody really cared about how many
people attended the event or how big the stage was. It was a night to celebrate
the courage and fighting spirit of the contestants. We all won that
night."
She says that her "rich and
challenging" life has taken another positive turn after winning the
contest.
"Polio made me wheelchair-bound
early on in life but I never saw it as a disability and worked hard to be
trained as a media professional like other normal people in the country.
"And winning the pageant is just
another way of showing that disability cannot stop you from feeling and looking
beautiful," the 41-year-old says.
Divya Arora feels her first runner-up
crown has strengthened her belief that "beauty is boundless".
Ms Arora, who earlier worked for a
leading newspaper, says her faith that "disability can never overshadow
her beauty and abilities" helped her do well in the pageant.
'Unique idea'
The contest is the idea of tax consultant
Sounak Banerjee whose life changed in 2006 when muscular dystrophy forced him
to use a wheelchair to get around in the bustling city of Mumbai.
Mr Banerjee liked watching Bollywood
films and TV shows but often found the absence of people with disabilities in
the entertainment industry "disturbing".
"Disabled people are also consumers
of the entertainment industry but they are seldom represented," he says.
He then came up with the idea of the Miss
Wheelchair India contest to fill the gap and provide a platform they could call
their own.
Planning the event was tough due to a
lack of funding and human resources, he says but adds that the struggles were
forgotten when the final day approached.
"I felt satisfied and happy when I
saw these women wearing their best costumes and a winning smile. It all came
together nicely in the end - I had done something for these courageous
contestants," he says.
"I found the contest very unique
because it honoured beauty irrespective of contestants' physical
disabilities," says scientist Gopika Anand, 31, who won the second
runner-up crown.
Ms Anand met with a road accident while
studying engineering and was soon confined to a wheelchair. But she persevered,
completed her course and found work as a scientist at a leading consumer
manufacturing firm.
Shelly Bhutani, another contestant, hopes
that the corporate world will take notice of the event in the future.
"I feel we too deserve to be in
front of the camera and get brand endorsements like Miss India winners,"
she says.
Ms Arora, however, felt the organisers
were not well prepared for the event and did not provide the kind of support
she had hoped for.
Mr Banerjee accepts that a lack of
sponsorship made the job of organising the event tough.
"I agree that there were problems at
the event. We will work harder and hope that more people will support the event
next year," he says.
But other contestants want to see change
at a more basic level.
India is not known to be a
disabled-friendly country as most public places, monuments and buildings do not
have facilities catering to their specific needs.
Bhavna Sharma, who won the contest in a
category that honoured people who are disabled but not necessarily confined to
a wheelchair, says citizens with disabilities do not feel inferior and have
achieved success in almost every field.
"But it's the country's poor
infrastructure for disabled people that lets us down," the 27-year-old
says.
'We are fighters'
Some years ago Neenu Kewlani travelled
all over India in a chauffer-driven car to highlight the problems faced by
those with physical challenges while commuting.
She says the problem is even more severe
in rural areas and smaller towns where people with disabilities are virtually
confined to their homes. Nearly every contestant expressed concern over a lack
of sensitivity about disability rights.
But not one of them is willing to give up
hope.
Ms Kewlani says there is a long way to go
in making India a disabled-friendly country but "we are not ready to give
up as we are fighters".
"Facilities are improving in cities
but we will continue to put pressure on governments to ensure they provide better
opportunities and infrastructure for the disabled," she adds.
Calcutta-based Sarmistha Sinha says
disability rights activists will have to continue fighting like other marginalised
sections of the society.
An accident in 2006 confined the
41-year-old doctor to a wheelchair, but she says her "thoughts and ability
to stay positive remained free".
Ms Sinha won in a category which honoured
married women in a wheelchair. But winning was not everything for her as she
wanted to use the platform to showcase her talent.
The wheelchair dancer saw the contest as
an opportunity to present her skills and meet people like herself from all over
the country. "I only wanted to dance as such opportunities are rare but
the feeling that I have won a beauty pageant is slowly sinking in," she
adds.
For Gopika Anand the real winning moment
came when she saw her father's moist eyes as the results were announced.
"I was overwhelmed to see her with
the crown. I am very proud today to be recognised as Gopika Anand's
father," says Anand Mohan.
BBC Monitoring reports and analyses news
from TV, radio, web and print media around the world. For more reports from BBC
Monitoring, click here. You can follow BBC Monitoring on Twitter and Facebook.
---
CULTURE/MEDIA
Meet the sign-language interpreter who's
translated at concerts for Jay-Z, Bruce Springsteen and Marilyn Manson. Mail
Online (11/29)
Holly Maniatty studied sign language at
Rochester Institute of Technology and decided to make a career out of
translating
The Portland, Maine native now spends
half of her year traveling the country to perform as an interpreter for the
deaf at live concerts
She has translated at concerts for Bruce
Springsteen, Eminem, Mumford and oOns, Jay-Z, Marilyn Manson, U2, the Beastie
Boys and Wu-Tang Clan
Holly Maniatty creates music — for the
deaf.
Teaming American Sign Language with dance
moves and body language, she brings musical performances alive for those who
can't hear. Her clients are a who's who of rock, pop and hip-hop: Bruce
Springsteen, Eminem, Mumford and Sons, Jay-Z, Billy Joel, Marilyn Manson, U2,
Beastie Boys and Wu-Tang Clan, to name a few.
Along the way, videos of her fast-motion,
helter-skelter signing have become popular online. There's the video of
Springsteen jumping down from the stage at the New Orleans Jazz Fest and
joining Maniatty and another interpreter. There, he dances and signs to
'Dancing in the Dark'.
'Deaf people were commenting, "Oh,
the Boss knows he has deaf fans. That's awesome,"' she said. 'When artists
connect with their interpreters, they also connect with their deaf fans.'
In another video, rap artist Killer Mike
approaches Ms Maniatty in front of the stage after noticing her animated
signing.
'I've never seen that before,' he says to
her before challenging her to sign a profane phrase, which she does
wholeheartedly as the crowd hoots and hollers.
At a Wu-Tang performance, Method Man took
notice of her signing, came down from the stage and joined her.
'He said, "That's dope," and
gave me a hug and a fist pump,' she said.
This month, she found herself at New
England's largest drag queen show, signing as performers from all over sashayed
down the runway and lip-synched to booming music.
Oscar-winning actress Marlee Matlin,
who's deaf, took to Twitter this year when she saw a video of Ms Maniatty
performing at the Wu-Tang show: 'Wu tang interpreter is rapping in sign BIG
time!!'
The 33-year-old, who lives outside
Portland, learned sign language while studying it at the Rochester Institute of
Technology in New York. She decided to make a living of it despite counselors'
advice against it.
She works for a company that connects
deaf people with other people over videophones that are connected online to
computers or TVs. But from mid-April to mid-September, she travels for paid
gigs interpreting all types of music — hip-hop, rock, jazz, country, gospel,
rap.
It's hard work. To prepare for concerts
and festivals, Ms Maniatty studies the musicians for whom she'll be signing.
She learns their lyrics, their dialect, their every move.
Jay-Z, for instance, is open and
boisterous on stage, while Eminem slouches and drops one of his shoulders.
'As much as you're able to study those
movements and incorporate them into your interpretation,' she said, 'you really
breathe that artist in, and it's more authentic for people'.
---
VIDEO (Not captioned): Museum hosts touch
tour for blind people. The Washington Post (12/3)
<iframe width="480"
height="290" scrolling="no"
src="http://www.washingtonpost.com/posttv/c/embed/1c956eb4-9753-4530-b700-253f215379d9"
frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
---
RESEARCH/STUDIES
‘Love Hormone’ Shows Promise For Autistic
Kids. Disability Scoop (12/3) by Michelle Diament
New evidence suggests that a nasal spray
of a naturally-occurring hormone may help improve socialization among children
with autism.
In the first study of its kind, researchers
say that a single dose of the hormone oxytocin enhanced activity in areas of
the brain associated with social tasks and could help make interactions with
others more rewarding for kids with autism.
The findings published Monday in the
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences come from a study of 17
children ages 8 to 16 with the developmental disorder who were randomly given a
nasal spray containing the hormone or a placebo. The kids were then asked to
complete a social task — identifying a person’s mental state by looking at
pictures of their eyes — and a non-social task — categorizing pictures of cars.
Researchers used functional magnetic
resonance imaging, or fMRI, to assess the children’s brain responses during the
activities.
“We found that brain centers associated
with reward and emotion recognition responded more during social tasks when
children received oxytocin instead of the placebo,” said study co-author Ilanit
Gordon of the Yale Child Study Center. “Oxytocin temporarily normalized brain
regions responsible for the social deficits seen in children with autism.”
Meanwhile, the study found that taking
oxytocin may help those with autism distinguish between social and non-social
stimuli, with kids who received the hormone showing a decrease in activity in
certain areas of the brain when they saw objects as opposed to people.
The double-blind, placebo-controlled
study is the first to assess the impact of oxytocin on brain function in
children with autism, researchers say. Preliminary findings were presented last
year at the International Meeting for Autism Research in Toronto.
Oxytocin is often called the “love
hormone.” It naturally occurs during childbirth, helping mothers bond with
their babies, and in other circumstances
While the findings are promising,
researchers said that further study is needed and much remains unknown about
oxytocin including whether or not it is safe to use for extended periods.
The best application for oxytocin may not
be as a long-term treatment for children with autism, the researchers said, but
rather as a tool to use during behavioral and other therapies to maximize
effectiveness of the treatments.
---
Original study: here
Oxytocin enhances brain function in
children with autism
Ilanit Gordona,b,1, Brent C. Vander Wyka,
Randi H. Bennetta, Cara Cordeauxa, Molly V. Lucasa, Jeffrey A. Eilbotta, Orna
Zagoory-Sharonc, James F. Leckmand, Ruth Feldmanb,c,d, and Kevin A. Pelphreya
Author Affiliations
Edited by Leslie G. Ungerleider, National
Institute of Mental Health, Bethesda, MD, and approved November 6, 2013 (received
for review July 8, 2013)
Significance
This article presents our discovery that
intranasal administration of oxytocin enhances activity in the brain for
socially meaningful stimuli and attenuates its response to nonsocially
meaningful stimuli in children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) as measured
via functional MRI. We also identified a relationship between changes in
salivary oxytocin following administration and enhancements in brain function.
These discoveries are particularly important given the urgent need for
treatments that target the core social dysfunction in ASD. The functional neural
attunement we demonstrated might facilitate social learning, thus potentially
bringing about long-term change in neural systems and subsequent behavioral
improvements. Our results illustrate the power of a translational neuroscience
approach to facilitate the development of pharmacological interventions for
neurodevelopmental disorders like ASD.
Abstract
Following intranasal administration of
oxytocin (OT), we measured, via functional MRI, changes in brain activity
during judgments of socially (Eyes) and nonsocially (Vehicles) meaningful
pictures in 17 children with high-functioning autism spectrum disorder (ASD).
OT increased activity in the striatum, the middle frontal gyrus, the medial
prefrontal cortex, the right orbitofrontal cortex, and the left superior
temporal sulcus. In the striatum, nucleus accumbens, left posterior superior
temporal sulcus, and left premotor cortex, OT increased activity during social
judgments and decreased activity during nonsocial judgments. Changes in
salivary OT concentrations from baseline to 30 min postadministration were
positively associated with increased activity in the right amygdala and
orbitofrontal cortex during social vs. nonsocial judgments. OT may thus
selectively have an impact on salience and hedonic evaluations of socially
meaningful stimuli in children with ASD, and thereby facilitate social
attunement. These findings further the development of a neurophysiological
systems-level understanding of mechanisms by which OT may enhance social
functioning in children with ASD.
Footnotes
1To whom correspondence should be
addressed. E-mail: ilanit.gordon@yale.edu.
Author contributions: I.G., J.F.L., R.F.,
and K.A.P. designed research; I.G., R.H.B., C.C., and M.V.L. performed
research; O.Z.-S. contributed new reagents/analytic tools; I.G., B.C.V.W.,
J.A.E., O.Z.-S., and K.A.P. analyzed data; I.G. and K.A.P. wrote the paper; and
J.F.L. was the medical doctor in charge of the study.
The authors declare no conflict of
interest.
This article is a PNAS Direct Submission.
This article contains supporting
information online at www.pnas.org/lookup/suppl/doi:10.1073/pnas.1312857110/-/DCSupplemental.
Freely available online through the PNAS
open access option.
---
HEALTH
Baby with disability denied heart
transplant. CNN (11/30) by Elizabeth Cohen
The mood in the room was somber as five
doctors, a nurse, and a social worker pulled their chairs around the table and
turned to address Autumn Chenkus and Charlie Higgs.
The couple's 5-month-old son, Maverick,
was down the hallway fighting for his life, and the doctors explained there was
nothing they could do to help him.
"Take your baby home and love him
for the time he has left," Chenkus and Higgs say the doctors told them.
They asked how long their son had left to
live. About six months, they remember the doctors telling them.
Higgs wept, but Chenkus felt like she'd
cried enough in the past five months for a lifetime. She was like a rock now,
and after the meeting with the doctors she went directly back to her son's room
without shedding a tear. In a chair next to his hospital crib, she opened her
laptop and hoped the Internet might have clues for how to keep her baby alive.
Maverick was born with a severe heart
defect, and even after two surgeries was in heart failure. Doctors had
discussed a heart transplant with Maverick's parents, but at the meeting they
said he didn't qualify for a new heart because he had a rare genetic defect
that put him at a high risk for tumors and infections. A heart transplant would
be too risky, they explained.
As Chenkus did her research on Maverick's
genetic condition, she couldn't believe her eyes. Not one of the studies she
read mentioned anything about an increased risk for tumors or infections. She
e-mailed one study's author, and he confirmed she was right.
Now they'll do the transplant for sure,
she told Maverick's father excitedly. Our son doesn't have to go home and die.
But it didn't matter. The doctors still
refused to give Maverick a new heart.
At first, Maverick's mother was confused,
but then she said it dawned on her: This supposed propensity for infections and
tumors was a smokescreen.
She felt the real reason the doctors were
denying their baby a life-saving transplant was that children with Maverick's
genetic condition grow up to have disabilities. They don't want to give Maverick
a heart because he won't grow up to be "normal," she thought.
At another meeting, she looked one of the
doctors in the eye.
"You're discriminating," she
said.
"That's ridiculous," she
remembers the doctor responding.
"You don't want to waste a heart on him,"
Chenkus replied. "You're trying to play God, and you're lying to me."
What happened next is the subject of a
federal investigation and has pitted a family against the very doctors who were
supposed to save their baby's life.
"They're blowing smoke up my
butt"
There are few hard and fast rules to
guide doctors as they select who will get a transplant, effectively selecting
who will live and who will die.
And there's no question some will die.
Last year in the United States, 321 people, including 19 infants, lost their
lives while waiting for a new heart. Right now, some 3,500 people await a heart
transplant, and the situation is only getting more desperate as the waiting
list grows but the number of donors remains about the same.
In the face of such scarcity, doctors try
to select the patients most likely to get the longest life, and the highest
quality of life, from a new heart.
"We have to be stewards of a very
valuable resource. We want hearts to go to people who we think will benefit the
most from them," said Dr. David Taylor, immediate past president of the
International Society for Heart and Lung Transplantation.
These decisions are, to some extent, subjective,
as doctors sometimes disagree with each other about who should get an organ.
Over the years, medical ethicists and patient advocates have accused transplant
physicians of discriminating against one group in particular: the disabled.
"We absolutely know this happens.
It's a huge problem," said David Magnus, director of the Center for
Biomedical Ethics at Stanford University. "It's real people sitting in a
room making these tough decisions, and it's not surprising their own prejudices
and biases influence them."
He points to the case of Amelia Rivera, a
New Jersey girl with disabilities who was denied a kidney transplant last year,
and to a survey he conducted in 2008 showing that more than four out of 10
pediatric transplant centers say they always or usually consider a child's
neurodevelopmental delays when making a transplant decision, even though
studies have found children with these delays fare just as well medically after
a transplant as other children.
In the past when transplant doctors rejected
patients with disabilities, they were often explicit about why.
"We do not feel that patients with
Down syndrome are appropriate candidates for heart-lung transplantations,"
doctors wrote in 1995 to a patient named Sandra Jensen, according to a newspaper
article at the time. An uproar ensued and Jensen got a new heart.
Now families and advocates say to avoid
adverse public reaction, doctors are shrouding their transplant denials in
medical excuses that some say are outright lies in order to avoid transplanting
patients who will never be "normal."
Karen Corby said doctors have given her
one reason after another for refusing to give a transplant to her son, Paul,
24, who has autism, and she doesn't believe any of them.
Corby, who reached out to three hospitals
for a heart transplant for her son, said doctors have told her Paul wouldn't be
able to manage the complicated drug regimen after his transplant. Corby, 47,
explained that she lives with her son and directs his care, and if anything
were to happen to her, he has "Team Paul," his sister and six aunts
and uncles.
She was also told transplant medications
could have potentially harmful interactions with Paul's psychiatric
medications. She responded that Paul's psychiatrist said he could easily switch
to other drugs.
Doctors also said they worried Paul might
not be able to let anyone know if he felt sick after the transplant. Karen
replied that her son, who graduated from high school and has taught himself to
program computers in several languages, is completely verbal and had alerted
her a few years earlier to subtle symptoms that ended up being a stroke.
"To be blunt, I feel like they're
blowing smoke up my butt," she said.
Ari Ne'eman, president of the Autistic
Self Advocacy Network, agreed that doctors sometimes "blow smoke" at
patients with disabilities.
"Doctors give faux medical reasons.
On further scrutiny, they don't stand up," said Ne'eman, who wrote a
policy brief on the issue. "When someone with a disability is looking for
a transplant, discrimination is the norm."
Transplant doctors said they don't
discriminate against people with disabilities, but that disabilities need to be
considered when making transplant decisions.
For example, Taylor, a heart transplant
cardiologist at the Cleveland Clinic, said physicians must weigh whether a
patient -- any patient -- is willing and able to follow complicated
post-transplant medication directions. If the patient doesn't follow doctors'
orders, the body could reject the new organ.
"If I were to go in front of the
transplant committee, they'd want to stop and see if I'm some pompous doctor
who's not going to listen to instructions," he said. "That has to be
taken into account."
Maverick's story: New York
Early in her pregnancy, Chenkus and her
boyfriend, Higgs, sat on the floor of a Barnes and Noble store poring through
baby name books, unable to agree on a boy name.
Higgs suggested "Maverick,"
like Tom Cruise's fighter pilot character in the movie "Top Gun."
Chenkus balked and kept searching.
But after a while, she warmed up to the
unusual name and it was settled: Maverick Banks Higgs, his middle name for the
street in the rural South Carolina town where Chenkus, now a hairstylist, and
Higgs, now a lawyer, met when they were 12 years old.
At an ultrasound a few months later,
Chenkus was grateful they had chosen a fighting name for their son. The scan
showed he had a severe heart defect, and doctors gave the couple three options:
terminate the pregnancy; give birth to Maverick and let him die, which would
happen within days or weeks; or give him a series of three surgeries.
Maverick's parents chose the surgeries
and met with doctors at New York-Presbyterian Hospital in Manhattan. At first
they enjoyed a good relationship, but then, as Chenkus put it, things got ugly.
The couple said they wanted the hospital
to talk to CNN about Maverick and agreed to waive their son's privacy rights,
but a spokeswoman for New York-Presbyterian said it would be inappropriate to
comment on Maverick's case.
The hospital issued this statement:
"New York-Presbyterian's transplant teams have evaluated thousands of
patients for lifesaving transplants over the past 40 years. These evaluations
are conducted with compassion, and include the input of physicians, nurses,
social workers and psychiatrists who bring the best ethical, medical and
scientific principles to the process."
On September 29, 2012, Maverick was born
with hypoplastic left heart syndrome. He had his first surgery when he was 4
days old at Morgan Stanley Children's Hospital, a part of the New
York-Presbyterian system. The surgery didn't go as well as the doctors had
hoped. By Christmas, Maverick was in the intensive care unit.
As Maverick's condition worsened, doctors
decided to perform a second surgery several months ahead of schedule. That
surgery didn't work, either.
Maverick was running out of options.
On March 18 of this year, the medical
director of the hospital's transplant program sent Chenkus a letter saying
Maverick was "an eligible transplant candidate." Maverick's parents
were elated.
But two days later, everything changed.
On March 20, the doctors called
Maverick's parents into a hospital conference room and told them they had just
received the results of a genetic test showing Maverick had Coffin-Siris
syndrome. Chenkus said the doctors went into detail about how because of this
syndrome Maverick would grow up to have intellectual disabilities and
developmental delays.
According to a recent study, babies with
Coffin-Siris sit, walk, and speak later than other children on average. They
have cognitive delays ranging from mild to severe and are often small for their
age and have difficulty feeding, vision problems, and other issues. Fewer than
100 cases of Coffin-Siris have been reported worldwide, according to the
report.
Two days later, the doctors convened
another meeting and said Maverick was no longer a candidate for a transplant.
According to Chenkus, they said children with Coffin-Siris have compromised
immune systems and are at a high risk for tumors and infections. After the
transplant, he would have to take drugs to suppress his immune system even
further, making the transplant too risky, they said.
His medical record includes a note about
the meeting, signed by Dr. Linda Addonizio, medical director of Presbyterian's
pediatric cardiac transplant program.
"His genetic defect is associated
with increased infections and tumors, which would be greatly magnified combined
with the immunosuppression involved in transplantation," the note said.
"I discussed that this does not mean we are giving up on Maverick, but
trying to improve his heart failure as best as possible and get him to gain
weight."
Chenkus disputes that version. She said
during the meeting the doctors offered no hope at all for Maverick, telling his
parents to love him for the time he had left.
According to Chenkus, the doctors never
proposed a treatment plan to get her son's heart better, and for the rest of
his stay at Presbyterian he didn't gain weight and remained in heart failure.
The doctors confirmed their decision with
a letter.
"After careful completion of
Maverick's medical history, it was determined that he does not qualify to be a
heart transplant candidate at our institution at this time," Addonizio
wrote. "This decision was based on the medical implications of his
Coffin-Siris syndrome, which would limit his survival and potential benefit
from transplantation."
The doctors gave Maverick's parents
information about Coffin-Siris, which cited a study by Dr. Gijs Santen at
Leiden University Medical Center in the Netherlands. Maverick's mother e-mailed
Santen and asked if it was true that children with Coffin-Siris have
compromised immune systems.
No, he wrote back, they don't.
"There is no objective problem with
the immune system (in children with Coffin-Siris)," Santen wrote to
Maverick's mother. "It is difficult to use infection risk as a reason not
to perform a heart transplant."
CNN interviewed Santen and five other
experts on Coffin-Siris, who explained that while some children with the
syndrome have been reported to have frequent infections, that's not uncommon
among children in general, even in ones without genetic disorders.
The six Coffin-Siris experts said
children with the syndrome do not have suppressed immune systems or increased
risk of infection or tumors and that in their opinion, Coffin-Siris isn't a
valid reason to deny a patient a transplant.
"I've never seen a child with
Coffin-Siris who was immune compromised," said Dr. John Carey, a
pediatrician and geneticist at the University of Utah School of Medicine who
has been studying the genetic syndrome for 36 years. "I don't think it's a
valid reason to deny a transplant."
"(Coffin-Siris) is not a reason to
say no to a transplant," said Dr. Grange Coffin, who first identified the
syndrome in 1970, along with his colleague at the University of California, Dr.
Evelyn Siris. "I would say it's wrong to do so."
Chenkus told her son's geneticist what
she'd learned from Santen, hoping she'd change her mind and offer Maverick a
new heart.
But she said the geneticist dismissed the
Dutch doctor as a "junior researcher."
Dismayed, Chenkus asked Santen to reach
out to Maverick's geneticist in New York directly. Santen sent the geneticist
an e-mail saying the reason for denying Maverick the transplant "is not
based on solid evidence," and that a more senior colleague of his agreed.
Presbyterian still wouldn't budge. They
insisted they would not give Maverick a transplant, emphasizing that he had a
compromised immune system.
On April 12, Chenkus called for another
meeting with Maverick's doctors, thinking she might have one more chance at
getting her baby a new heart.
She repeated what she'd learned from the
Coffin-Siris experts, and asked them a question. Maverick was now 6 months old
and had spent nearly his entire life in the hospital, a well-known source for
germs, and he'd had multiple invasive procedures that would have given those
germs a good opportunity to invade his body. If he had a compromised immune
system, why had he never had a single infection, not even a case of the
sniffles?
She said the doctors didn't answer her
question, said they had another meeting to attend and walked out the door.
Chenkus sat in the room, sobbing.
"I can't f***ing believe this,"
she thought to herself.
"The more I fought, the less they
listened," she said. "But I knew that going home to die was not his
fate."
Maverick's story: Philadelphia and
Cleveland
Chenkus and Higgs realized they didn't
have a chance of getting Maverick a transplant at New York-Presbyterian. They
knew they had to move fast.
The couple reached out to three
well-respected heart transplant centers: Children's Hospital of Philadelphia,
the Cleveland Clinic and Boston Children's Hospital.
But they were to meet with only more
disappointment.
On May 6, according to Maverick's mother,
two of Maverick's doctors walked into his hospital room and said the doctors in
Philadelphia had refused to give him a new heart for the same reason: that his
Coffin-Siris syndrome meant he had a suppressed immune system.
But Chenkus said when she got on the
phone with the Philadelphia doctor, he told a different story. According to
her, he said Maverick's genetic problems played very little role in their
decision making. He said they wouldn't give her son a transplant because of
"the big picture."
Chenkus said she asked the doctor several
times to explain what he meant by "the big picture," but she said his
answers were vague, and he repeated that at a surgical conference a team of
physicians had unanimously agreed that Maverick wasn't a candidate for
transplantation. Chenkus asked the doctor to send her a copy of the written
report from that conference.
Children's Hospital of Philadelphia
declined to comment for this story about Maverick's case, but sent CNN a statement
about their transplant policies in general.
"The Children's Hospital of
Philadelphia does not disqualify potential transplant candidates on the basis
of intellectual abilities, and, in fact, has transplanted many children with a
wide range of disabilities, both physical and intellectual. CHOP is deeply
committed to providing the best possible medical care to all children,
including those with any form of disability," according to the statement.
"Patients with certain complex
conditions display a predisposition to serious illnesses, which can be
exacerbated by transplant-related care, such as immunosuppressive drugs, which
are necessary to prevent rejection after transplant. These serious
co-morbidities are severe impediments to organ transplant success. For some
patients, transplantation simply serves to replace one serious medical
situation with another," the statement continued.
"When faced with such significant
countervailing negative medical risks, the transplant evaluation team must
sometimes make the difficult decision to recommend against transplant at CHOP,
despite knowing how devastating such decisions can be for any family who has
come to us for help."
Two hospitals had now refused to give
Maverick a new heart for completely different reasons, neither of which made
sense to Maverick's parents. They continued to feel that their son's disability
was the real reason for the denials, and they felt powerless to do anything
about it.
Maverick's parents watched their son's
health deteriorate, his heart function getting worse and worse. They pinned
their hopes for their son's life on the Cleveland Clinic and Boston Children's
Hospital.
A few days later, they received an e-mail
from Dr. Gerard Boyle, medical director of pediatric heart failure and transplant
services at the Cleveland Clinic, saying his hospital wouldn't give Maverick a
transplant, either.
The doctor said Maverick was at "the
highest risk of early death post-transplant" because he'd had two failed
surgeries for his hypoplastic left heart syndrome. He e-mailed Chenkus a study
saying one year after transplant, 70% of babies like Maverick were still alive,
compared to the most successful group of babies, who had an 89% survival rate.
In addition, Boyle noted that Maverick
had a gastronomy tube in his stomach for his feedings, considered a risk for
infection, and they could close the tube, but then they would have to replace
it after the transplant.
Chenkus wrote back hoping Boyle might
reconsider, but once again her hopes were crushed.
"Transplantation in a child with a
genetic defect is frought (sic) with uncertainties," the Cleveland Clinic
doctor wrote to her. "We in the transplant community are charged with
protecting a precious resource, a donated heart. We must do our best to assure
this precious gift has the best chance of success in bringing a full life to
its recipient."
He said the hospital "would be happy
to offer management of his heart failure and to optimize his medical care to
provide him as long a life as we are able," but he was adamant that
Maverick was not a transplant candidate.
Boyle added he had heard through
Maverick's cardiologist in New York that Chenkus was meeting with a physician
at Boston Children's Hospital.
"I applaud you for that
initiative," he wrote to Chenkus.
"We are obviously not alone in this
determination as (Presbyterian) has made this clear and I assume Boston has as
well knowing them as well as I do," he wrote.
He added that the Boston doctor was a
"friend and colleague" of his. "It is my understanding that Boston
has a similar stance on the question of transplant that I have outlined. That
is no coincidence as we are all a small community of pediatric transplant
specialist (sic) and are all aware of the current data and literature," he
added.
Angie Kiska, a spokeswoman for the
Cleveland Clinic, declined to comment for this story because Maverick was never
a patient there. In an e-mail, Boyle said he is "not interested in
participating in this story."
Time was now more critical than ever.
Maverick's parents drove from New York to Boston Children's Hospital to save
their son's life.
Maverick's story: Boston
Finally, in Boston, Chenkus and Higgs
heard what they'd been hoping for. The doctors agreed to accept Maverick as a
patient, and while they couldn't promise he would be eligible for a heart
transplant, they didn't rule one out as the other hospitals had done.
On May 18, Maverick was taken by
ambulance from New York to Boston, where for the next three weeks doctors
tinkered with his medications. He responded quickly: His blood pressure, once
sky high, went down more than 30 points and the level of oxygen in his blood,
once dangerously low, rose dramatically.
Maverick, who had been lethargic and
sleeping 18 hours a day toward the end of his hospital stay in New York, became
more lively. He gained a pound in one month in Boston, after gaining no weight
in his last three months in New York.
"He was a completely different
baby," Chenkus said.
It was ironic, she thought, that as she
watched the Boston doctors improve her son's health, she received the surgical
discussion summary she had asked for from Children's Hospital of Philadelphia.
It said they had no hope for her son.
"We regret that we do not have an
intervention to offer Maverick that is more likely to help than harm him at
this time," she read.
On June 7, Maverick's Boston doctors
called a meeting. Once again, a group of physicians in white coats gathered
around a conference table and turned to face Chenkus and Higgs. But this
meeting was far different from the one in New York 11 weeks earlier.
The doctors reported that Maverick was
doing so well he didn't need a transplant after all and could go home in a few
weeks -- not to die, but to live.
They added that Maverick might need a
heart transplant in the future, and if he did, his Coffin-Siris syndrome
wouldn't stand in the way. He wasn't immune compromised and he didn't have a
high risk for tumors.
After fighting for her child for so many
months, Chenkus put her head down on the table and cried. It was her 32nd
birthday, and it was the best present she could have received.
As Chenkus walked out of the meeting, she
thanked hospital geneticist Dr. Amy Roberts and gave her a hug.
"I felt like the weight of the world
had been taken off my shoulders," she said.
On June 21, Maverick was discharged from
Boston Children's Hospital. He has been back a few times for short stays, but
Chenkus said that he's thriving.
He turned 1 on September 29, can sit up
by himself and can stand and jump if someone holds his hands. He loves to play
with toys (a baby-sized keyboard is his favorite) and grabs his bottle.
Like other children his age, he's a
social baby, interacting with those around him, and he shows particular
affection for his parents and others who are close to him. He knows what he
likes and doesn't like: He chows down on applesauce and mashed bananas, but
spits his carrots back out at his mother.
A few weeks ago, he said his first word:
"Mama."
Chenkus said she thinks the Boston
doctors figured out a way to get her baby out of heart failure simply because
they were willing to put forth the effort, even though he'll likely have
disabilities.
"The difference between Boston and
all the other hospitals is the way they cared -- the fact that they
cared," she said.
'Maverick amazes me constantly'
In August, the U.S. Department of Health
and Human Services' Office for Civil Rights agreed to investigate a complaint
against New York Presbyterian Morgan Stanley Children's Hospital, Addonizio,
and Dr. Wendy Chung, a geneticist at New York-Presbyterian. The complaint
charges Maverick's civil rights were violated and that he was discriminated
against based on his disability.
CNN reached out to both doctors for
comment. Presbyterian Hospital spokeswoman Christina Stolfo declined to respond
specifically to the complaint, and referred us back to the hospital's previous
statement.
In the complaint, filed April 16 by
Maverick's father, he recounts how the hospital refused to give their son a
transplant and "then told us to take our son home and wait for him to
die."
"The hospital first said the
decision was based on Maverick being at a heightened risk for tumors and
infection. We later learned that this was false information and that Maverick
is not at a heightened risk for tumors or infection," Higgs wrote in the
complaint.
"The real reason the hospital is
refusing to list our son or consider him for a transplant is the hospital's perception
that Maverick will be mentally and/or physically delayed. It is clear that the
hospitals (sic) decision to deny Maverick a transplant is based on nothing more
than this illegal discrimination," Maverick's father concluded.
Today, Maverick's mother starts to cry
when she looks at her son and remembers how seven months ago his doctors said
he had had about six months to live.
"I'm glad I didn't give up and I'm
glad I didn't lose hope, and I'm glad I didn't listen to the doctors," she
said. "Maverick amazes me constantly."
---
Immune system may play crucial role in
mental health. USA TODAY (12/1) by Karen Weintraub
Considering inflammation has helped
neuroscientists cast a broader net when searching for causes of and possible
treatments for mental illness, mood disorders and neurodevelopmental
conditions.
Last time you had a bad cold, you likely
had less energy than usual. You lay around and didn't have any enthusiasm for
your usual activities. After it dragged on for a day or two, a sense of
helplessness probably set in. It was hard to remember what feeling good felt
like or how you could ever bound off the couch again.
In short, for a few days, you probably
felt a lot like someone with depression.
And increasingly, scientists think it's
no coincidence that a mental illness feels like a physical one.
A growing body of research on conditions
from bipolar disorder to schizophrenia to depression is starting to suggest a
tighter link than was previously realized between ailments of the mind and
body. Activation of the immune system seems to play a crucial role in both.
"We just didn't understand how much
of a role the immune system plays in how we think and feel and act," says
Andrew Miller, a professor of psychiatry at Emory University. "An
overactive immune system or when there's something going on in the immune
system, it can have consequences on the brain."
An immune response, including
inflammation, new research suggests, may help explain why:
• Brain conditions such as multiple
sclerosis, Parkinson's and Alzheimer's disease all affect mood;
• About one in four people hospitalized
with schizophrenia had a urinary tract infection when admitted to the hospital;
• Mothers with auto-immune conditions
such as lupus are more likely to have a child on the autism spectrum;
• People with higher rates of inflammation
are more likely to show signs of depression than those with healthy immune
function. A study in mice presented earlier this month at the Society for
Neuroscience's annual convention showed that the immune changes came before the
emotional ones.
"One of the things we need to stop
thinking is that mental health is just a disorder of the brain," says
researcher Georgia Hodes, of the Icahn Medical Institute at Mount Sinai
Hospital, who conducted the mouse study. "There's plenty of evidence in a
number of different mental illnesses that they have components to them that
relate to the entire body."
Merely adding inflammation to their
thinking has helped neuroscientists cast a broader net when searching for
causes of and possible treatments for mental illness, mood disorders and
neurodevelopmental conditions such as autism, researchers say.
And this mind-immune system connection
might help explain why mental health treatments don't work for some people.
Perhaps, researchers now think, those people would be better off with
approaches that target their immune systems rather than their brain chemicals.
For those with schizophrenia and urinary
tract infections, for instance, acute psychotic symptoms often improve after a
few days on antibiotics, according to Brian Miller, an assistant professor of
psychiatry at Georgia Regents University in Augusta, who is studying the
connection between the conditions. This isn't to suggest that all people with
schizophrenia should be on antibiotics, Miller says, but patients with both
might get as much or more relief from antibiotics as antipsychotics.
Other studies show that the level of an
inflammatory protein called interleukin 6 may help predict someone's emotional
state. Manipulating the levels of this protein changes behavior on depression
and anxiety tests in mice, says Larry Swanson, a neuroscientist at the
University of Southern California, and immediate past president of the Society
for Neuroscience.
Researchers are still working out the
connection between the immune system and autism, says Judy Van de Water, an
immunologist at the MIND Institute at the University of California-Davis. There
is some indication, she says, that the people with autism who have the most
behavioral problems, such as irritability and hyperactivity, also show the
highest levels of inflammation. She says she hopes that better understanding
the role of inflammation in autism will lead to treatments.
The immune system's role might also fit
into the "second-hit" idea of mental illness, where two or more
factors, such as genetics, immune challenges and, say, a hit to the head,
combine to cause brain problems. That may explain why traumatic brain injuries
often lead to depression, says Jonathan Godbout, a neuroscientist and associate
professor at the Institute for Behavioral Medicine Research at The Ohio State
University Wexner Medical Center.
A serious infection during pregnancy or
early in life might make someone more vulnerable to problems later, says
Godbout. "It's like a priming or sensitization. There are secondary
triggers that can reactivate something and make it worse."
What is clear, says Andrew Miller of
Emory, is that the body and mind both influence one another. "It's a
two-way street — what happens psychologically can affect you physiologically
and then feed back and affect you psychologically. The brain and immune system
— their interactions are quite meaningful for health and illness."
Tips for keeping down inflammation, which
might help promote good mental health:
• Keep stress to manageable levels
(inflammation probably causes stress and stress can cause inflammation; both
are bad for the body and the brain.)
• Exercise.
• Maintain a healthy weight (excess fat
leads to inflammation).
• Get adequate sleep — 7½ to eight hours
a night, on average.
• Avoid serious infections while pregnant
and in early childhood.
• There is a little evidence that
anti-inflammatory drugs, including aspirin, might help improve mood, though
that research is very preliminary and these drugs are probably not strong
enough to treat full-blown illnesses, say researchers.
---
TECHNOLOGY
UMass Boston, IBM working on tech center
for people with disabilities. The Boston Globe (12/3) by Michael B. Farrell
The University of Massachusetts Boston
and computer giant IBM Corp. are teaming up to devise new ways for people with
disabilities and the elderly to benefit from technological advancements.
Through a partnership that will be
announced Tuesday, the two will open the nonprofit Collaborative Innovation Center
that will build on the research that both UMass and IBM have been doing for
decades to increase accessibility in the workplace and on campus for people who
have vision, hearing, and other impairments.
Much of the center’s focus will be on
developing new technology, but it will also work to create new policies for
government agencies, schools, and businesses in order to reduce the barriers to
using computer technology.
“Access to the Web has become pretty
central,” said William Kiernan, dean and research professor of the newly formed
UMass School of Global Inclusion and Social Development. “All we are trying to
do is level the playing field for people who want to participate in the
community.”
Kiernan is one of the country’s leading
researchers on workforce issues facing people with disabilities, and the
collaboration with IBM builds on work he has been doing since the 1970s.
Since then, he has advised scores of
government agencies, schools, and businesses on ways to increase accessibility
for the disabled and seniors. What’s more, UMass was also one of the first
schools in the country to provide services to disabled students.
The collaboration with IBM should help
accelerate UMass’s research by tapping into the company’s trove of scientists
and technologies.
“The private sector tends to move faster
than universities,” Kiernan said.
The joint effort is for now a research
collaboration only. IBM would not comment on whether it stands to benefit
commercially from any products developed by the center.
Many disabled people cannot experience
the fullness of the World Wide Web. People with hearing loss, for example, are
shut out of the millions of videos posted on the Web. While the Federal
Communications Commission says videos shown on TV with captions must also have
those captions when aired online, that doesn’t apply to the vast majority of
videos posted by individuals on services such as YouTube.
Also, the American Association of People
with Disabilities reports that 54 percent of disabled adults use the Internet
compared with 81 percent of those without a disability.
The Collaborative Innovation Center will
borrow from experts across disciplines at IBM as well as faculty and students
at UMass to staff the center and work on various projects. Its work will be
conducted both at the UMass campus in Boston and at IBM's Innovation Center in
Cambridge. UMass will fund much of the work through grants.
While IBM and UMass will focus on
building many new technologies from scratch — especially for mobile devices
such as smartphones and tablets — some of the work will be honing existing
projects already underway at IBM. One of its first endeavors, for instance,
will be to further develop a prototype app for students with disabilities to
find their way around campus by locating ramps and buildings with elevators, or
where a blind student might find audio guides and other services.
“We hope that we can develop very
practical applications that can be deployed on campus and then to cities,” said
Frances West, director of IBM's Human Ability and Accessibility Center.
In addition to the long history of
support and advocacy for people with disabilities at UMass, IBM has also been
at the cutting edge of developing technologies for people with hearing and
sight loss. For instance, in the 1980s, IBM created a talking typewriter and
soon thereafter developed one of the first computer screen readers.
“We’ve had to innovate and develop
technologies to help our own employees, so we have accumulated many best
practices,” said West.
Another goal for the center is to raise
awareness about the need for app developers and other technology companies to
include accessibility features into all software from the get-go, said West.
That way, she said, “it isn’t an afterthought.”
Michael B. Farrell can be reached at
michael.farrell@globe.com.
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American Association of People with
Disabilities
2013 H Street NorthWest, 5th Floor
Washington, DC 20006 United States
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