Autism Treatment Cost Help On Horizon?
A New Bill Being Introduced Would Provide Health Insurance Coverage For Those With Autism
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Early Show medical correspondent, Dr. Jennifer Ashton (CBS)
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Play CBS Video Video Congress Debates Autism Bill Health coverage for Autistic conditions and testing such as applied behavior analysis may become law nationwide, reports Dr. Jennifer Ashton.
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Interactive Breaking The Silence Find out more about autism, and where to get help for someone who may have this neurological disorder.
Early Show medical correspondent Dr. Jennifer Ashton tells co-anchor Harry Smith that making autism treatment insurable is welcome news for parents.
For Dylan Colosimo - the signs of autism became apparent by his second birthday.
A home video shows Dylan not having a response to his birthday presents.
"He regressed and that's when I really started to get concerned," said Dylan's mother, Pam Colosimo.
Dylan's parents began early intervention and a costly therapy known as applied behavior analysis, or ABA, which measures and rewards positive behavior.
"He needs to practice skills ten times more, a hundred times more, a thousand times more than a regular child," said Pam Colosimo.
ABA is also used by teachers at Dylan's school, the Reed Academy, but 40 hours of ABA is recommended each week. So, Dylan's treatment continues at home with his family and a tutor at a cost of $2,000 a month.
"You just can't put a price on a child's life," said Pam Colosimo.
But the Colosimos out of pocket expenses may soon be covered by insurance. Twenty-four states have legislation to make health insurers responsible for certain autism treatments. Eight states have already made such coverage mandatory.
"Dylan may not get substantially better. He may not recover as some people might say ... " Dylan's father, Rick Colosimo said. " ... but I know without ABA, he absolutely wouldn't. He wouldn't have a real future."
For more on autism issues and to access autism resources, go to the Web site of AutismSpeaks.
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- Dylan is a student at REED Academy in Garfield, NJ (http://reedacademy.org/index.htm), an Applied Behavior Analytic school program where thousands of dollars are spent daily educating and improving the lives of the students and their families. It is imperative that health insurance companies fund the home programs children with autism require.
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