Report reveals rural children miss out on early intervention funds.
نویسنده
چکیده
A new report into therapy services for children with disabilities and autism has found that rural children access up to 60% less funding than their urban peers under two key government programs that provide help for families to cover the cost of early intervention. The report, conducted for Services for Australian Rural and Remote Allied Health (SARRAH) as part of an Australian National University (ANU) research project, was based on a survey of advisors and registrants with Australia’s two early intervention programs, Helping Children with Autism (HCWA) and Better Start for Children with a Disability (Better Start). Under the programs, children with a diagnosis of disability or autism can access federally funded therapy services of up to $12 000 per child up to the age of seven. However, the research found a serious shortage of allied health professionals in country areas, especially psychologists, meant that the majority of children living in rural and remote Australia could not access as much therapy as city-based children. Although HCWA and Better Start include a $2000 travel allowance for families living in outer regional, remote or very remote areas, the programs do not include travel allowances for therapists. The research also looked at the registration data for clients of HCWA and Better Start and found that rural children were 23% less likely to be registered – which means they cannot access the funds they are entitled to for therapies such as psychology, occupational therapy and speech pathology. All three of these allied health services are regarded as best practice for children with autism to maximise their potential for improving speech and behaviour prior to starting school. Report author Maximiliane Hanft, a Masters student at the ANU, concluded that ‘the individual funding model that lies at the heart of HCWA and Better Start, which is based on the idea of choice and empowerment of clients, fails in rural Australia’. Ms Hanft conducted the research under the ANU’s Internship Program while on a 12-week placement at SARRAH, which administers the National Rural and Remote Support Service – a federally funded program that aims to extend early intervention therapies across rural and remote Australia by tackling the barriers to practising allied health services outside of the cities. Her final report maps the areas with the greatest service deficits, which include Charleville, Emerald, Pilbara, Kimberley, Deloraine, Warwick, Roma, Gayndah, Nhulunbuy, Katherine, Alice Springs, Young, Moree, Griffith and Bega. However, one city has not escaped the problem, with Darwin listed as needing more speech pathologists. Louise Pemble Communications Officer, Services for Australian Rural and Remote Allied Health [email protected] Services for Australian Rural and Remote Allied Health piece for December issue From the Journal Associates FIGURE 1: Allied health early intervention therapist with child in rural Australia. bs_bs_banner
منابع مشابه
A cross sectional study of maternal near miss and mortality at a rural tertiary centre in southern nigeria
BACKGROUND The study evaluated the pattern of severe maternal outcome, near miss indicators and associated patient and healthcare factors at a private referral hospital in rural Nigeria. METHODS This was a cross sectional study conducted from September 2014 to August 2015 in Madonna University Teaching Hospital Elele, Rivers State, Nigeria. Pregnant and postpartum women were recruited for the...
متن کاملOmid Early Intervention Programme for Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder and Their Families in Iran
Child development research has established the importance of support and services for children with special needs and their families at very early stages after the diagnosis. These services offered in the form of the early intervention programmes. There is a dearth of early intervention programmes for children with autism spectrum disorders and their families in Iran. A parent based early inter...
متن کاملEffect of Early Intervention on Language Development in Hearing-Impaired Children
Introduction: Hearing loss from birth up to the age of 3 years has a negative effect on speech/language development and results in sensory, cognitive, emotional, and academic defects in adulthood by causing delayed development of communicative-linguistic abilities. The present study was performed in order to assess the effect of early intervention on language development in Persian children age...
متن کاملPromoting use of booster seats in rural areas through community sports programs.
BACKGROUND Booster seats reduce mortality and morbidity for young children in car crashes, but use is low, particularly in rural areas. This study targeted rural communities in 4 states using a community sports-based approach. OBJECTIVE The Strike Out Child Passenger Injury (Strike Out) intervention incorporated education about booster seat use in children ages 4-7 years within instructional ...
متن کاملThe Effects of an Early Family-centered Tele-intervention on the Preverbal and Listening Skills of Deaf Children Under tow Years Old
Objectives: Achieving optimal outcomes in deaf children’s communication skills depends on the availability of early specialized high-quality intervention services. Early intervention services through teletechnology could respond to this need. The development of teletechnology has led to the creation of new formats for family-centered services. Such measures could address the hearing, speech, an...
متن کاملذخیره در منابع من
با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید
عنوان ژورنال:
- The Australian journal of rural health
دوره 22 6 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2014