Date: Fri 23-Apr-1999
Date: Fri 23-Apr-1999
Publication: Bee
Author: KAAREN
Quick Words:
Autism-Walsh-Letso
Full Text:
Life With Autism Demands Attention, Learning, And Love
(with photos)
BY KAAREN VALENTA
Nicholas Walsh was a normal two-year-old, according to his mother, Dinah, when
he suddenly began to withdraw into himself.
"Until then he was talking, walking, acting normally," Mrs Walsh said. "Then
he started slipping away into his own little world."
By the time he was three, Nicky, who celebrated his sixth birthday on April
23, was diagnosed with autism. The disorder was not commonly known until actor
Dustin Hoffman played an autistic older brother in the movie Rain Main.
Autism is a severe developmental disorder usually identified during the first
three years of a child's life. While each child is unique, children with this
disability often have substantial impairment in the areas of communication,
socialization and play skills, and may engage in behavior that others consider
abnormal or disruptive.
"I want people to understand when Nicky has a `moment' in the Big Y, that it
is because he has autism and is unable to control himself," Mrs Walsh said.
"People have no clue what is going on and they often don't know what being
autistic means. One woman told me her grandson is `artistic' too, but he
doesn't behave like Nicky. When I replied, `not artistic, autistic,' she just
stared at me."
Another Newtown resident, Suzanne Letso, has a nine-year-old autistic son,
Tyler. When he was diagnosed six years ago, Mrs Letso was told he would never
talk and would require lifelong care. In response, she co-founded a parent
support group and began her own research.
"I had a background of marketing research in the international medical product
industry, so I did the same thing as if a problem had been presented to me at
work," Mrs Letso said. "I learned there is no magic pill [for autism] and no
effective intervention other than an educational strategy based on the
principles of applied behavior analysis [ABA]."
While this teaching strategy has been used successfully for years, the problem
has been a shortage of qualified professionals who have been trained to use
it, she said.
"Historically children with autism don't fare well," she said. "Ninety percent
wind up in a residential program, 75 percent by the age of 14. That has
dropped to 10 to 14 percent who have been placed in residential programs by
age 14."
Mrs Letso became a member of the Connecticut Department of Education's Task
Force on Autism, the Connecticut Special Education Resource Center's Autism
Training Providers Groups, the Committee for Early Detection in Autism, and
vice president and founding board member of the Association for Science in
Autism Treatment, a national organization.
In 1995, Mrs Letso founded the Connecticut Center for Child Development, Inc.,
(CCCD) to sponsor conferences, offer courses and provide consulting services
to public schools, families, and the state's Birth to Three Program. Soon
thereafter CCCD moved into a church basement in Fairfield where it opened a
nonprofit school for children ages 3 to 12 with autism and related disorders
and offered a graduate program in ABA through an affiliation with the
University of North Texas. Currently 11 graduate students are in the CCCD
program.
CCCD is more than a typical school, Dinah Walsh said.
"The students learn about dressing and undressing, toileting, how to play
appropriately with toys, how to follow social cues," she said. "Children with
autism need so much more support. It's always like two steps forward, one step
back."
Next week CCCD is opening a new facility at 925 Bridgeport Avenue in Milford
which will enable it to expand services to include an early intervention
program for one- to three-year-olds. The building, which previously housed a
retail business, needed extensive renovations.
Autism Awareness Month
"It's fitting to be opening our new facility during Autism Awareness Month,"
Mrs Letso said. "There are extensive studies and growing bodies of literature
that document the tremendous gains children with autism and related disorders
can make with early, intensive intervention."
"Currently we have 15 children in the school, with a maximum of 30," Mrs Letso
said. "Eventually we want to expand to serve older children, ages 12 to 21. We
have received a donation of 50 acres of land in New York where we want to have
a summer camp. We also envision an assisted work program and a residential
living facility."
No one knows what causes autism. Researchers are investigating many possible
contributing factors including the environment, immunizations, antibiotics,
allergies, diet, perhaps something that triggers an inherited, genetic
predisposition.
"As a parent, when you are told there is no known cause and no cure, you spend
your whole life as a little field researcher on the heels of the doctors," Mrs
Walsh said. "You get on the Internet, go to the library, talk to other
mothers, and think back over everything that happened in your life."
"Nicky had [taken] antibiotics 23 times before his third birthday, so I wonder
whether it could have been that, or maybe it was fumes from the new carpeting
we put in his room," Mrs Walsh said. "I go to every conference I possibly can
to learn everything I can."
When she met Suzanne Letso, it changed her life.
"She took me by the hand and led me out of the woods," Mrs Walsh said. "I was
so naive, I knew nothing about autism."
Although taking Nicky to school at CCCD means two daily round trips, Mrs Walsh
said the more than three hours of driving is a small price to pay for the help
that he is getting.
"Nicholas doesn't have the skills to be with peers [in a public school]," she
said. "He would be highly disruptive and wouldn't be able to learn. You have
to make eye contact with him -- get in his face -- before you talk to him. The
most stressful part is making a conscious effort every time you deal with him.
It's hard to do 24 hours a day."
Although it felt like the child she knew died when Nicky slipped into autism,
Dinah Walsh said her feelings are far more complicated than that.
"There isn't a day that goes by that I don't feel the pain of losing Nicky to
autism," she said, "but also not a day goes by that I don't feel blessed for
all he has taught my husband and I -- he has given us to much more compassion
for other people."
On May 1, a gala dinner dance will be held at the Greenwich Hyatt Regency to
benefit the CCCD's building renovation fund. Celebrity superstars Dan Marino,
Doug Fluti, John Elway, Troy Aikman, Glenn Foley, Kent Graham, Danny Kanell,
Jim Fassel and Jason Sehorn will be among the special guests.
"Dan Marino and Doug Flutie each have a young child with an autism spectrum
disorder and their own foundations which support autism," Mrs Letso said. "The
fact that they are coming to show their support of CCCD says a great deal
about their commitment to enhancing awareness of effective autism education
and treatment."
Gala tickets are $500 per person. The evening includes a cocktail reception at
6:30 pm, presentations and dinner at 8 pm. Entertainment will include the
music of composer Ricky Ian Gordon, and also the Sounds Perfect orchestra.
Supporters also are holding a raffle for a 1999 Jeep Cherokee Larado. Tickets
are $50 and a limit of 2,500 will be sold. The winner will be drawn at the
gala; the winner need not be present. Tickets for the gala and the raffle may
be obtained by calling CCCD at 203/254-1912 or Dinah Walsh at 426-4127.
Mrs Walsh said there is a newly established parent support group in Newtown,
where there are 16 children, ages 2« to 16, with autism. Contact persons for
the group are Dawn Ford, 426-6158, and Patty Calderera, 426-9773.