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Roger Holt

Top 30 Autism Spectrum Blogs of 2013 at Babble - 0 views

  • As autism diagnoses keep increasing, so too do the number of blogs about autism. Self-advocates, parents with autism who have kids with autism, and non-autistic parents all bring their own viewpoints, and all need to be heard. Babble's 2013 Top 30 Autism Blogs brings you voices from a range of viewpoints: some familiar, some fresh. We're excited that this year's picks include several blogs that are new to our list, including Asperkids, Stimeyland, Just a Lil Blog, The Third Glance, and The Domestic Goddess.
Roger Holt

The top 30 autism Facebook fan pages of 2013! at Babble - 0 views

  • Whether they’re looking to find practical advice on therapies, filter out misinformation, or just vent about a rough day, many parents of children with autism have found support in the Facebook community. Babble’s trusted panel has once again been tasked with narrowing down this year’s Top 30 Autism Facebook Fan Pages. This list includes pages created by advocacy organizations, autism professionals, bloggers (some of whom also appear on our Top 30 Autism Blogs), and much more. We’re confident you’ll see some of your favorites here (if not, be sure to nominate them in the comments for consideration on next year’s list!), but we also hope you’ll find new sources of information and advice. — Barbara Spindel
Meliah Bell

Family Tree Center - Parenting Classes - Billings, MT - Multiple Dates - 0 views

  •  
    Please call 406-252-9799 by FEBRUARY 4th to set up an enrollment appointment.

    What:
    15 Week parenting classes focusing on discipline, rewards, consequences, family rules, decision making, child development, brain development, empathy, family morals, values and more. Parents are urged to bring their children to a Parent-Child interaction facility in each class. Free child care and dinner are provided for children during each class. Where:
    The Family Tree Center
    2520 5th Ave South
    Billings, MT 59102 When:
    Grade School Age: Wednesdays 5:30-7:30pm Beginning Feb. 6th
    Babies & Toddlers: Mondays 5:30-7:30pm Beginning Feb 11th
    Babies & Toddlers: Mondays 5:30-7:30pm Open ended class. Please call to enroll. Cost:
    Fees are $20 for materials (due at first class) and $10 per class if a certificate of completion is required. Class must be paid in full before certificates are issued. Contact:
    Any questions or concerns call 406-252-9799
    www.familytreecenterbillings.org
Roger Holt

Baby Milestones: Motor Development - YouTube - 0 views

  • Published on Apr 18, 2014 https://www.einstein.yu.edu/cerc - Pediatrician Lisa Shulman shows the motor milestones expected in typically developing babies, from head control to walking and what pediatricians look for during a well-baby visit. She also explains the specific types of motor control a baby must master before the next milestone can be achieved. Dr. Shulman is associate professor of clinical pediatrics at Albert Einstein College of Medicine and an attending physician in pediatrics at The Children's Hospital at Montefiore. She is also director of the RELATE program for the diagnosis and treatment of autism and related disorders at Einstein's Children's Evaluation and Rehabilitation (CERC).
Roger Holt

text4baby - info via cell phone for pregnant women - 0 views

  • Text4baby is a free mobile information service designed to promote maternal and child health. An educational program of the National Healthy Mothers, Healthy Babies Coalition (HMHB), text4baby provides pregnant women and new moms with information they need to take care of their health and give their babies the best possible start in life. Women who sign up for the service by texting BABY (or BEBE for Spanish) to 511411 will receive free SMS text messages each week, timed to their due date or baby’s date of birth.
Meliah Bell

AMCHP Annual Conference - Washington D.C. - Feb 9-12, 2013 - 2 views

  •  
    Click here to register for this conference

    What:
    The AMCHP Annual Conference Training Institute offers a rich program of skills-building sessions starting on Saturday, Feb. 9. Sunday afternoon will kick-off the first general session, launching two and a half days of education, motivation, and interaction.

    When/Where:
    February 9, 2013   9am - 4:30pm
    February 10, 2013   9am - 12pm Omni Shoreham Hotel
    2500 Calvert Street
    Washington, DC 20008 Topics Discussed: Professional Development Tools for MCH Leadership in Challenging Times Communicating the Value of Preconception Health to Illustrate a Return on Investment Painless Practical Principles of Evaluation for Community-based Projects: Collecting and Using Data for Quality Improvement and Generating Project Support Medicaid and the Children's Health Insurance Program 101 for MCH Leaders: The Family-Centered Care Assessment: A Tool for Quality Improvement MCH 3.0--Advancing the MCH Vision Ease of Use of Services for Latino Families with CSHCN: Lessons Learned from 5 states Brief Tobacco Intervention Skills Certification For Pregnant and Postpartum Women Using Entrepreneurial and INtrepreneurial Skills in MCH Systems Building A Life Course Perspective on Injury Prevention: From Babies to Grannies and Back Again Building a Strong MCH Foundation to Weather Storms: Skills-building in Reproductive Health Preparedness Science Marketing Your MCH Block Grant to Gather Meaningful Input from Stakeholders Selecting the "Right" Program: Using Systematic Reviews to Identify Effective Programs Optimizing Health Reform to Improve Maternal and Infant Health Outcomes </h
Roger Holt

Establishing a sound foundation for children who are deaf or hard of hearing: Karl Whit... - 0 views

  • Over the past decade, tremendous progress has been made in ensureing that families have access to hearing screening when a baby is born. Approximately 95% of babies now receive a hearing screen shortly after birth. Now, greater emphasis must be placed on training early childhood education and health care providers.
Meliah Bell

National Lekotek Center "Birth-3 Years: Milestone Journey" - Webinar - Nov. 13, 2012 - 0 views

  •  
    Click here to register for the webinar

    What:
    A baby's brain is made up of billions of brain cells that must be connected together in order for his brain to develop. The baby's brain is able to make 700 new connections between these cells every second. The first three years in a child's life are when his brain is able to make the most connections. These connections are the foundation for all future learning. That is why it is important to help the baby make positive connections as soon as possible. This webinar will focus on the importance of brain development and encouraging early milestones beginning at birth.   When:
    Nov. 13, 2013
    10am - 11am Mountain Time   Contact:
    April Anguiano
    773-528-5766 ext. 402
     aanguiano@lekotek.org  
Roger Holt

Many babies with development delays may go untreated | Reuters - 0 views

  • (Reuters Health) - About one out of every three infants who scores well below average on a test of developmental skills -- and is therefore considered at a high risk of having delays -- does not get referred to early intervention services, according to a new study.
Roger Holt

CDC Features - Newborn Screening Can Help Prevent Problems - 0 views

  • Newborn babies are screened, even if they look healthy, because some medical conditions cannot be seen by just looking at the baby. Finding these conditions soon after birth can help prevent some serious problems, such as brain damage, organ damage, and even death.
Terry Booth

Immunization Q & A Session: Ask an Expert - Bozeman - July 31, 2012 - 0 views

  •  
    What:
    Angie Ostrowski, MD, Bozeman Deaconess Family Medicine and Pediatrics invite parents to an overview about childhood vaccines. This will be followed by a question-and-answer session. Dr. Ostrowski wants parents in the community to be informed and have up to date information on vaccines. This forum immediately follows Books and Babies at Bozeman Public Library. When:
    Tuesday, July 31, 2012
    11:00am - 12:00pm Mountain Where:
    Bozeman Public Library - Small Conference Room
    Bozeman, MT More Information:
    Call 406-522-1644
Roger Holt

Autism Speaks: Guide on Clinical Assessment of Infants - 0 views

  • Now Available For Families – Baby Siblings Research Consortium Publishes Guide on Clinical Assessment of Infants
  • In May, the journal Pediatrics published an article authored by members of Autism Speaks' High Risk Baby Siblings Research Consortium (BSRC) to expand on the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) recommendations on evaluation by primary care providers of 18 and 24 months olds with suspected autism spectrum disorders (ASD), and is part of an ongoing effort of the BSRC to share research findings with the clinical community. By focusing their research on detecting the earliest signs of autism in high risk infants (younger siblings of children with autism), BSRC investigators have gained important insights about assessment and treatment issues that place them in a unique position to provide guidance on how to follow through with current AAP guidelines.
Roger Holt

Librarians: Forget Baby Einstein; Try Reading - 10/29/2009 - School Library Journal - 0 views

  • Librarians and media specialists are secretly saying "I told you so" about the Walt Disney Company’s decision to issue a full refund on the Baby Einstein videos that parents have bought by the millions over the last five years.
Roger Holt

Parents of micro preemie face heart-wrenching decisions - Tampa Bay Times - 0 views

  • In between those scenarios is a zone between life and death, between viability and futility. If a baby is born after the 22nd week of pregnancy but before the 25th, not even the smartest doctors in the world can say what will happen to it. New technologies can sometimes keep these micropreemies alive, but many end up disabled, some catastrophically so. Whether to provide care to these infants is one of the fundamental controversies in neonatology.
Sierra Boehm

How My Autistic Son Got Lost in the Public School System - 0 views

  • The waiting room was loud and chaotic. Toddlers were stacking blocks, then squealing with excitement as they knocked them over and watched them fall. Baby toys were chiming and buzzing. A cartoon was blaring on the television mounted above us. My son Henry (not his real name) was not playing with the other children. He was nestled in my lap, quietly leafing through a picture book. My winter coat partially enshrouded him from the bedlam encircling us. When we were finally called in, our pediatrician examined Henry physically and declared him a healthy 15-month-old. Then she began to ask me a lot of questions about his behavior.
Roger Holt

Life Went On Around Her, Redefining Care by Bridging a Divide - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • In 1988, when Anne Fadiman met Lia Lee, then 5, for the first time, she wrote down her impressions in four spare lines that now read like found poetry:.
  • barefoot mother gently rocking silent child ¶ diaper, sweater, strings around wrist ¶ like a baby, but she’s so big ¶ mother kisses and strokes her ¶ The story of Lia, the severely brain-damaged daughter of Hmong refugees who had resettled in California, became the subject of Ms. Fadiman’s first book, “The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down,” published in 1997. ¶ Its title is the English translation of the condition known as qaug dab peg (pronounced “kow da pay”), the Hmong term for epilepsy, from which Lia had suffered since infancy. ¶ In traditional Hmong belief, qaug dab peg, like many illnesses, is spiritual in origin, caused when the soul becomes separated from the body. A traditional cure might entail visits from a shaman, who would attempt to reunite body and soul.¶ A work of narrative nonfiction, Ms. Fadiman’s book is a cautionary tale about the cultural chasm between Lia’s family, with its generations-old animist beliefs, and her rationalist American doctors.
Roger Holt

Vanderbilt study shows mother's voice improves hospitalization and feeding in preemies ... - 0 views

  • Premature babies who receive an interventional therapy combining their mother’s voice and a pacifier-activated music player learn to eat more efficiently and have their feeding tubes removed sooner than other preemies, according to a Monroe Carell Jr. Children’s Hospital at Vanderbilt study published today in Pediatrics.
Roger Holt

Cause or Effect | Simons Simplex Community | Interactive Autism Network Community | Sha... - 0 views

  • Parents are bombarded with stories about autism research. Headlines and somber-voiced announcers declare that new research has found that autism is linked to a smorgasbord of things: mom's age, dad's age, grandfather's age, living near freeways, living near farms, prenatal stress, premature birth, fertility treatments, obese mothers, flu during pregnancy, having babies too closely together, and so on. How do we make sense of this?
Roger Holt

Parent Mentors Ease Path For Newly Diagnosed - Disability Scoop - 0 views

  • About two hours after Melissa Thomason gave birth to her son Welles, she and her husband learned their baby had the chromosomal abnormality known as Down syndrome. “I remember sitting in the hospital room and having a lot of uncertainty about what that diagnosis meant for us, what it meant for him.” She wished she could talk to someone who’d had the same experience.
Roger Holt

KXLH | State lab in Helena screens newborns with blood tests - 0 views

  • According to the Montana Department of Public Heath &amp; Human Services, about 35 babies are born in the Treasure State every day.Shortly after birth, a blood sample is taken for all newborns and shipped to the state lab in Helena. There, the Serology &amp; Newborn Screening Lab tests for 28 conditions.
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