Showing posts with label #Restigouche. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #Restigouche. Show all posts

Sunday, June 16, 2019

The Weber "Report" Is No Magic Wand - It's a Government Paid For Rush Job -Close the Restigouche and Close it NOW! - Open the Autism Centre & Village

The Weber "Report" Is No Magic Wand - It's a Government Paid For Rush Job -Close the Restigouche and Close it NOW! - Open the Autism Centre & Village



The Restigouche Psychiatric Hospital has been developed as a tool for economic development over the protests of the Autism Society New Brunswick, parent autism advocates and UNB Professor Emeritus (Paul McDonnell) for over 15 years. It lacks the Psychiatric Expertise of Moncton and the Autism Expertise of Fredericton. Adults with severe autism disorders are sent to Campbellton with a declining population (11,000 to 6000). They are sent there as part of a failed economic development strategy for the declining population in Campbellton.  They are sent there as political bargaining chips in exchange for votes. 





Contrary to Article 25 of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (to which Canada is a signatory)   it is as far as possible from the large population in South NB - Fredericton, Moncton, Woodstock and Saint John and their families and its abuse and failure to protect has been recently documented by the Ombud Report "Failure to Protect". The Weber Report is a Paid For Rush Job that tells the government what it wanted to hear.
The Resitigouche PH is a clear contravention of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities to which Canada is a signatory. yet the Weber Report now released to the general public was tasked with finding ways to keep it.
Close the Restigouche Hospital and Close it NOW!
Open the Autism Centre & Village!


Sunday, July 30, 2017

Worries About the Future for Family Members of Autistic Adults


Very little is known about autism and adulthood. Family members are often the primary support for autistic adults and frequently express concerns about what the future will hold and what support will be available for their relative.

 The above quote is from the JADD abstract below.  It hits one of the greatest autism issues square on the head. The future of autistic adults once family members can no longer provide the care they need in varying degrees.


The Restigouche Psychiatric Hospital located on NB's northern border
 far from most families in NB, and far from the autism expertise which has
 been developing in centrally located Fredericton. It is very difficult for families
 in the south to travel to Campbellton and back on a regular basis to maintain
 ties with severely autistic adult family members.

Parents in New Brunswick fought hard for early autism services in NB and for autism trained teacher aides to work with our children in our schools but when it comes to adult autism residential care and treatment the government has not budged.  Adults with severe autism requiring long term residential care and treatment are still sent, for purely political reasons, (as documented re the youth mental health facility)  to the northern NB border, to the  Restigouche Psychiatric Hospital in Campbellton, as far as possible from families, the overwhelming majority of whom live in central (near NB's autism expertise) and southern New Brunswick. The travel time particularly in winter or during summer construction seasons renders maintenance of family relationships sent to the Restigouce hospital extremely difficult.
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Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders

Brief Report: What Happens When I Can No Longer Support My Autistic Relative? Worries About the Future for Family Members of Autistic Adults

  • Renske Herrema
  • Deborah Garland
  • Malcolm Osborne
  • Mark Freeston
  • Emma Honey
  • Jacqui Rodgers
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Brief Report







Abstract

Very little is known about autism and adulthood. Family members are often the primary support for autistic adults and frequently express concerns about what the future will hold and what support will be available for their relative. 
120 family members of autistic adults completed an online survey exploring concerns about the future for their relative. The most endorsed concerns were “their needs won’t be met” (77% worried weekly), “whether they will be happy” (72% worried weekly) and “who will care for them” (58% worried weekly). The results highlight the importance of implementing structured and timely support through collaboration with governmental policy, local commissioning and communication with charities to help prepare family members and their autistic relative for the future.