Showing posts with label Safety. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Safety. Show all posts

ASD.. Street & Community Safety; ASD and Teaching Safety Instruction Part 1



https://www.youtube.com/user/AutismDayByDay/videos

This is an ABA approach to priming safety in the community as taught by Nick's team. We are having a very rough time with safety, so we created this tool. It's a 6 part short video maybe it will help you too. 
Donna

Silver Alert Expanding to Include Individuals with Developmental Disabilities


Sacramento Is Considering Expanding The Silver Alert To Include Those With Autism!

Sacramento is considering something akin to the Amber alert for those with autism; they would expand the Silver Alert — intended for seniors over 65 — to include those on the spectrum, due to their tendency to wander.
An 18-year-old with autism in Los Angeles county recently bolted from his mother when they were out shopping — and he wasn’t found for almost three weeks. His mother and grandmother searched everywhere for him, and after reaching out to law enforcement and receiving little aid, they turned to online autism communities.
Watch the following video to hear more and then - if you have not already done so - go to http://www.missingkids.com/awaare and send the Autism Related Wandering PSA to your friends, family neighbors. Our autism community understands we have a problem, but the entire community needs to understand. Let's use this PSA and spread the word! 
Read more at http://blog.theautismsite.com/silveralertautism/#EEtQAevCfcbTYuVs.99

Help Get The Word Out! Share this PSA & Increase Awareness about Autism Related Wandering

Step one was the creation of this PSA. Step two and most important is sharing to save lives.  You can share this link or send people directly to http://www.missingkids.com/awaare to watch the PSA. Doesn't matter how we do it, only that we do.  Thanks!!!





Additional resources

If you are looking for more information about autism and wandering, check out these resources.

The National Center for Missing & Exploited Children is dedicated to raising awareness of wandering in the autism community.

The AWAARE Collaboration has a mission to prevent autism-related wandering incidents and deaths.
  • Frequently Asked Questions - Answers to some of the most common questions regarding wandering in the autism community.
  • Big Red Safety Toolkit - Download tools and resources for caregivers of someone with an autism spectrum disorder who is prone to wandering.


Home “Jail” vs County Jail - No Good Choices for Parents




I’m the parent of an young black man whose lack of social skills scares people. He is an easy target for molestation, has no understanding of community danger and if a police officer yelled “Stop” he would not. This is what parents caring for adults are faced with. When society offers families no choices, well intentioned parents can make bad decisions. Faced with nothing but bad choices, what would you do? Personally. if my choice is to find a way to keep my son in my house - in ways that society may view as abusive - where I can manage the danger, or treat him like a typical child and risk him wandering into the community I’m going for keeping him in my house. For parents faced with impossible decisions I can understand them believing any restrictions they create in their home would be less than those their child would face in Jail or an institution.

Coping with adult children’s autism, parents may face ‘least bad’ decisions

For parents like Mark and Barbara Bucknam, the transition to adulthood for autistic children is filled with gut-wrenching choices and challenges.

John rides in the back of the car with his mom after camp. Over the next 10 years, 500,000 children with autism will become adults, according to Lisa Goring, a top official at the advocacy group Autism Speaks. Evelyn Hockstein/For The Washington Post



By Dan Morse July 26
Adult twins with autism locked in a barren basement room every night. No lights. No bed. Their parents charged with abuse.


The criminal allegations against Janice and John Land that erupted last week in Montgomery County have captured the attention of many — but no group more so than other parents who are caring for the growing number of autistic children entering adulthood.
“We can’t condone their choices,” says Mark Bucknam, a professor at the National War College who lives two miles from the Lands. Court papers say that the young men were kept in a room with no working lights and a comforter on a bare tile floor. “But it’s possible that, in their minds, this was the least bad way to deal with this,” Bucknam says.


As he speaks, his 18-year-old son John starts to pace and moan in the kitchen. John typically won’t sit down for dinner until he and his parents are around the table, holding hands, his father saying the blessing. Mark walks toward the kitchen, past the locked front door, the locked door to the garage, the locked door to the basement. Those barriers, along with a tracking device John wears, the burglar alarm and the fence around the house, are designed to keep him from wandering off.
John Bucknam wears a tracking device on his ankle so he can be found in case he wanders away from home. His parents have a series of locks on their doors to keep John from wandering off. (Evelyn Hockstein/For The Washington Post)
But sometimes, even that isn’t enough. Three years ago, wearing green pajamas, John made his way to a Metro train platform four miles away just before a train came barreling into the station.


For parents like the Bucknams, their children’s transition to adulthood is filled with gut-wrenching choices and challenges. The assistance connected with high school programs goes away. The best adult services often are at the end of long waiting lists. The pressures mount for parents to prepare for life after they’re gone. In the world of autism, this transition is known as going over “the cliff.” “You’re in a whole different world,” Barbara Bucknam says.


And their ranks are poised to grow. This year, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released figures showing 1 in 58 children in the United States have Autism Spectrum Disorder, a term that captures the wide range of ways autism affects children. That was a 30 percent jump from two years earlier and more than double the rates from six years before that.
And over the next 10 years, 500,000 children with autism will become adults, according to Lisa Goring, a top official at the advocacy group Autism Speaks. “There are not enough services. It’s a real problem for families.”


Fierce advocates
In places like Montgomery, parents such as Darla Tagrin must be ready every day to advocate for their children so they can make use of government-funded programs.
For 12 months, Tagrin tried to get her 22-year-old daughter transitioned from high school to a day treatment program or a supervised job. But one facility after another turned her daughter away, Tagrin says, something she attributes to her daughter needing almost constant one-on-one attention. Tagrin recently enrolled her daughter into a program that she helps administer: lining up the therapists to come to her home or take her daughter into the community.


“Managing this is a full-time job,” Tagrin says. “You have all the duties of a company owner. If you already have a full-time job, it can be nearly impossible. But this program is a lifeline for us.”


Tagrin and others say that as family members with autism age, it becomes even more important to refuse to take no for an answer when seeking services for day programs or housing facilities. “You kind of have to fight for things. If one person says no, you have to keep calling,” she says.


Comparing her situation with that of the Lands’, Tagrin says the Lands could have made use of plastic mattress covers or perhaps a room-monitoring system. Still, she knows how challenging her nonverbal daughter can be. “And it doesn’t sound like she’s nearly as tough as those twins,” Tagrin says.


In the best cases, parents find that the right adult programs can exceed the care their children received in school. Kathy Page, another Montgomery resident, is the parent of 22-year-old and 24-year-old sons with autism. Their high school administrators helped transition them into “day-habilitation” treatment at a nonprofit group called Community Support Services.
“They’re helping them develop as human beings,” Page says.


At home, she has discussed the Land case with her husband, Tom. Maybe the dark, basement room was the Lands’ way of keeping their children out of an over-stimulated environment, he suggested.


Page says she understands the frustrations the Lands must have felt. But she ultimately thinks they could have done more — made another call to get help or redoubled efforts to bring in a therapist who might have taught the twins to move around the house more safely.
“I just kind of feel in my gut that they gave up on them,” she says.


Insurance coverage
Every day in Montgomery, Laurie Reyes has a direct view of challenges facing families. She is a county police officer whose job is to help vulnerable residents’ caregivers. On average, Reyes says, two or three people with autism wander away from their homes every week.
The officer works with families to employ a “layered” approach to keep kids and adults safe: Identification bracelets, information letters given to neighbors, in-home therapists, alarm systems, electronic tracking bracelets. But even the best defenses don’t always work.
Reyes sees a difference between children who go missing and the adults who do so.
People are more apt to intervene when they see an 8-year-old walking down the street. But someone older or full-grown, even if acting erratically? People might drive right by, too intimidated to approach. “If you have a little child, people are going to jump to help,” Reyes says. “That’s a huge dynamic.”


The officer has worked with families of autistic children for 10 years and has learned to broaden her duties. She trains patrol officers in the best ways to communicate with people who are autistic. She works with social workers to try to get kids and adults into programs.
And she’s even testified to support legislation that would prompt health insurance companies to pay for in-home alarm systems — asserting that in the simplest of terms, that can be a medical need. But to date, she’s gotten insurance payments for only two systems.
“It’s a fight to get that coverage,” Reyes says.


At ‘substantial risk’
As for the criminal case against John and Janice Land of Rockville, new details in court filings last week paint an ever-troubling picture as social workers moved to become the twins’ legal guardians and place them into a group home.


It was a team of police officers that discovered the basement room where the twins slept. Early the morning of July 17, a SWAT team entered the Lands’ home, where at least two of their other sons live, as part of an unrelated marijuana case. Officers came upon the locked room, went inside and found the twins. “They were found in feces and urine,” county attorney


Peggy Odick wrote in court papers, asserting that the locked room amounted to imprisonment that left the twins at “substantial risk of death or immediate and serious physical harm.”
The parents have not been available to comment. But John Land’s father — John Land III — has said the criminal allegations are overstated given the challenge the twins presented. On Friday, he said the young men had been toilet trained in the past but had regressed. Because of that, his son had to remove furniture from the basement room, he said.
Land III says that keeping the twins locked in the basement prevented them from going through the house at night and turning on water faucets or the oven. “They had to be confined, held by the hand or watched within arm’s length — 24/7.”
Land III says his son and his son’s wife have expressed fatigue over caring for the twins: “Their hearts don’t want them to go, but their heads are telling them it just might be too much.”
Eyes on the future


Inside the Bucknams’ home, also in Rockville, Mark and Barbara are trying to transition their 18-year-old son to his adult years. Two big questions and challenges: Can they find an agency that will help John find a supervised job? And should he be moved into a group home to learn how to cope after they’re gone?


Their efforts are an extension of what the couple has been doing all of John’s life. After he was diagnosed with autism, Barbara phased out her work as a physician to devote herself to overseeing his care, to managing the tangle of insurance claims and paperwork that goes along with it. These days, the Bucknams have begun looking at programs that might be able to help John find a vocation.


But his tendency to wander off presents a challenge. His communication — largely through single words to express needs, such as “computer” or “food” — could make working directly with the public difficult.


But John’s ability to learn can also be inspiring. His innate desire to stack and organize objects could lend itself to a position at a warehouse. “We hope one of these agencies will pick John,” Barbara says. She would like to see him eventually try a group home. Mark is not sure that he could function well enough, and he wants to manage everyone’s expectations.


“All we want,” Mark says, “is for our son to be safe and happy.”


Drowning Leading Cause of Death for Children With Autism

As a mom who lives in California, where there is seemingly a pool in every backyard, a key reason we purchased our home was it did not have a pool. I don't have a statistic on wandering compared to non-wandering related drowning’s, either way it’s clear we have to tackle both. My son is a wanderer, actually he's a seeker. He intentionally finds ways to escape our house in search of things he wants, and he has ZERO safety awareness. By zero I mean Nick has the safety awareness of a two year old. The difference is when we see a 2 year old alone we all stop and help. When people see my son alone they just stare.
The good news is I know this about him and I've put systems in place to protect him. My neighbors who have looked up to find Nick in their houseUNINVITED, know it too. Their awareness creates a safety net.
If you have a pool I recommend a highly secured pool area, and I've asked my neighbors with pools to lock their gates.  
Articles like this are not new news to parents who have children with autism, it's just confirmation people are listening and getting the word out. 

Drowning Leading Cause of Death for Children With Autism
Researchers at the University of Sciences found that drowning is a major cause of death among children with autism.
Families with autistic children are most concerned about water safety. The study led by Varleisha Gibbs, occupational therapy professor at the University, found that autistic children get overstimulated in crowded areas and escape into unsafe environment.

Autism is a lifelong neurodevelopmental disorder that impairs social interaction, verbal and non-verbal communication and forms of repetitive or restricted behavior. The Centers of Disease Control and Prevention reveals that 1 in 68 children have autism spectrum disorder (ASD). It is five times more common in boys and costs at least $17,000 more every year to care for a child with ASD.

"Among the plethora of concerns for families dealing with autism, includes addressing water safety practices as early as possible in a child's life," said Dr. Gibbs. "Although water safety is a concern for all parents, children with autism are especially at a higher risk for drowning because they may seek isolation by fleeing to unfamiliar territories."

According to the National Autism Association, accidental drowning led to 90 percent of the total U.S. deaths reported in children with autism of age 14 and younger in 2009-2011.  Also, 50 percent of the children with autism try to escape into safe environment which is nearly four times more than children without autism.

Some of the safety tips researchers suggest are: enrolling children in swimming and water safety lessons as early as possible, using video narratives to discuss water safety and if they respond well to visual cues then signs like STOP or DO NOT ENTER on the doors that open to outside must be used.

Following this will help parents to relax and enjoy the summer with their children who are diagnosed with autism.
"Swimming and aquatic therapy is actually a wonderful sport for children with autism because it can address many of their body's sensory and motor needs," said Dr. Gibbs. "By preparing and communicating with your child with autism, family, and friends, summer trips and activities can be much less stressful and more enjoyable."

Half of All Autistic Kids Will Run Away

This post is not for parents of kids with autism, it's for everyone else! This article paints a clear picture about "eloping" or "wandering" and our kids. Please consider forwarding or re-posting in our effort to create a community safety net for our kids through education.   

Our kids don't have to be a statistic. 
Half of All Autistic Kids Will Run Away, Tragedy Often Follows

way from home before their 17th birthday. Many of them die, often by drowning.
Within hours one day in April, two children went missing hundreds of miles apart from each other.
On the surface they appear to have little in common.
Angelo Messineo is a 16-year-old from Georgia. He was found alive on a horse farm four days after he disappeared from school on April 16. Alyvia Navarro, 3, of Wareham, Mass., was pronounced dead hours after she was reported missing, drowned in a pond near her grandmother's home, on the same day.
They are just two of the thousands of children who went missing last month.
But Angelo and Alyvia have one thing in common, and it's a trait shared with at least one child who goes missing every day in America. They are autistic.
Nearly half of all children with autism will run away and potentially go missing at least once before their 17th birthday, according to a study by the American Academy of Pediatrics. Of those who run away, what clinicians call "eloping," many will be found dead.

The numbers alone present a challenge for law enforcement authorities, who regularly rank searches for missing children among the most difficult work they do.
But finding children with autism -- who shirk when their names are called out, who run away at the sound of police sirens, who are afraid of the dogs sent to find them, and who naturally are comforted by burrowing and hiding -- makes a hard job even harder, investigators say.
One in 50 children is diagnosed annually with autism, a spectrum of neurodevelopment disorders marked by problems with social interaction and communication, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta. As the number of children who are diagnosed increases, so too does the number of kids who run off, leaving rescuers to learn quickly how best to handle a unique set of challenges.
The stories of Angelo and Alyvia, and dozens of children like them, present two sides of a phenomenon still not entirely understood.
On the one hand, autistic children are more likely to run away than unaffected children. When they do runaway, they are more likely to die than unaffected children. And more often than not, 91 percent of the time, those deaths are a result of drowning. But what is so perplexing to researchers and rescuers are the stories like Angelo's. Stories of almost super-human rates of survival for young children with developmental disabilities, who manage to stay alive for days often in the wilderness and against staggering odds.
"It's a mystery," said Robert G. Lowery Jr. of the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children. "Time and again, we see cases where autistic children live longer and survive in harsher settings than unaffected children. We don't really know why. It might be that these children with autism have a diminished sense of fear, but it's astonishing."
Stories like Alyvia's are also all too common.
The 3-year-old girl was there, at her grandmother's side at their home at the Lakeside Trailer Park in Wareham, Mass., and a moment later she was gone. Twenty-five minutes later, her grandmother Valerie Navarro called the police. Police, fire, EMS, K-9 units and the nearby harbormaster began a search for the girl, who was discovered an hour later, according to Wareham police.
A patrol found the girl in a pond near her grandmother's home, and she was evacuated via helicopter to a hospital in Boston where she was later pronounced dead.
Girls More Likely to Die
Calls to Alyvia's grandmother Valerie Navarro were not returned.
Boys are four times more likely to be diagnosed with autism, but girls, like Alyvia, are twice more likely than boys to die after an elopement, according to Lori McIlwain, executive director of the National Autism Association, which tracks eloping incidents and deaths.
In 2012, 195 autistic children went missing, according to the autism association, which only tracks those incidents reported by the media.
Between 2009 and 2011, 91 percent of autistic children younger than 14 died in drowning incidents after elopements. More than two-thirds of those deaths occurred in small natural bodies of water like creeks, lakes, rivers and ponds.
"Oftentimes, children who go missing are low or nonverbal," McIlwain said. "But they know where a pond is. They see it from the car going to and from school every day, but they can't tell mom or dad that they want go to the pond and play. They think about it and when they have the chance, they bolt."
It's a story all too familiar to Beth Martin, a single mother with three kids, whose 7-year-old daughter Savannah drowned in a pond near her Lawton, Okla., home in 2011.
"My daughter loved Ramen noodles," Martin said, remembering the Sunday morning that her daughter died. "I knew I had exactly four minutes. Typically, she would stare for four minutes, watching the noodles cook. I popped my head outside to tell my oldest, who's 11, to watch my youngest, who's 2, because I was going to run to the bathroom. I thought it was safe to go to bathroom."
'I Couldn't Get Them Both Out of the Water'
Before the noodles finished cooking, Savannah and her younger brother were gone.
"They both were missing," Martin said. "I asked the oldest where they went, but he didn't know. I panicked and looked all over the house and yard. I kept calling their names. I ran to the highway and then to our neighbors to ask if they had seen them. I asked my son to wait by the house and he came running to say he could hear them screaming."
By the time Martin made it to the half-filled pond on the edge of her property, Savannah was under the water. Her younger brother, who had been wearing a padded bicycle helmet, was kept barely afloat by its buoyancy.
"I couldn't get them both out of the water. … I started to panic and the neighbor jumped in to pull them out," Martin remembered. "I just collapsed after that."
Martin was a conscientious mother. When Savannah was born, doctors told her that her daughter would never talk or say, "I love you, mommy." Martin worked with her religiously, and the girl had begun talking. She even knew the lyrics to her favorite Taylor Swift songs.
She had enrolled Savannah in kindergarten, registered her for swim lessons, was looking to install alarms in case she ever ran off, and made a point to teach her daughter the boundaries on the property.
"I thought I had spoken with all kinds of experts about raising a child with Savannah's needs. But I was never told about wandering or about the likelihood of drowning. No expert ever told me that," Martin said.
In that way, Martin is like the majority of parents raising children with autism.
Sixty percent of parents are unaware of the likelihood that their child will elope or the subsequent risks of death, according to a survey by the National Autism Association.
The National Center for Missing & Exploited Children works with law enforcement agencies across the country to train cops on how best to search for children with autism.
Deaths Are Quick and Quiet
"We make recommendations to law enforcement about things they should be doing immediately," said Lee Manning, a former Massachusetts state trooper and now a consultant for the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children.
"[Police] have to respond very seriously and not waste any time. One of the things we strongly recommend is to get first responders, even neighbors, dispatched to local bodies of water right away," said Manning a member of Team Adam, a nationwide rapid response team of retired cops that helps law enforcement on the most difficult missing children cases.
Tragedies like the deaths of Savannah and Alyvia rarely make the front pages of newspapers or the morning television programs.
Their deaths are quick and quiet. But there is another class of autistic elopers who beat the odds with such astonishing results that law enforcement officials and rescuers are studying them to learn how best to search for runaways in the future.
On the same day Alyvia went missing, so did Angelo Messineo.
Angelo is a 16-year-old boy with a severe form of autism. A ward of the state, he is nonverbal and prone to violent outbursts. He "bolted from school after some sort of incident" in Lithonia, Ga., according to investigators.
Police scoured the woods of DeKalb County, Ga., for four days with few clues. Angelo was found April 20 on a horse farm 14 miles from where he was last seen. He was identified by police after an altercation with other teenagers.
He was taken to a nearby hospital and treated for dehydration.
Calls for comment to the DeKalb County School District were referred to the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children.
'They Tend to Burrow Down and Hide'
Unaffected children tend to panic, they walk in loops, they take dangerous risks in an attempt to save themselves, but children with autism tend to "have a diminished sense of fear," Lowery of the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children said. "There's a different search criteria for children with autism. They tend to burrow down and hide. We don't know if it's because they fear searchers or if it's a kind of game. They seem to realize the peril they're in," he added
Two of the largest missing children searches in recent years involved kids with autism.
In 2010, 11-year-old Nadia Bloom was found by a volunteer after spending four days in an alligator-infested swamp in Florida. She was dehydrated and covered in insect bites.
In 2011, the largest manhunt in Virginia history took place more than six days as volunteers and rescuers scoured a dense forest looking for 8-year-old Robert Wood Jr., who ran off while visiting a state Civil War park with his father.
Robert was found alive by a volunteer, who has remained anonymous even to the boy's family, in a quarry about a mile from where he went missing. When he was found, he was in a fetal ball and burrowed in the dirt.
The search for Robert has become an important model for rescuers who conduct searches for children with autism.
"We knew never to take him where there was a pond," his grandmother Norma Williams said. "Like many autistic children, Robert is fearless. He doesn't feel pain. He doesn't fear heights. He doesn't fear water, but he can't swim. He'll jump off just about anything."
Many of the things that attract autistic children, often to their demise, were in the park trails that connected to rivers, roads and railroad tracks.
For five nights, Williams camped outside the park in her truck praying and waiting for news of Robert.
"I dropped to my knees when they told me he was alive and an investigator helped to get me back up. I couldn't stop crying," she said. "Robert's feet were so swollen, his shoes were stuck in mud, he had curled up in a ravine when the temperature dropped and it began to rain."
Since his rescue, Robert's family has allowed the local sheriff to outfit him with a radio anklet similar to those given to prisoners on house arrest, so he can be tracked if he runs away in the future.
"People have to understand autistic children aren't like other children," Williams said. "They're special. They run when they want and do what they want. And just because they can't speak doesn't mean they're not thinking things.
"If you went to those woods, you'd see they're so dense the light doesn't come through. There's coyotes and snakes and spiders.
"How did he survive? How do they survive? If you don't believe in God, come see Robert."



Keeping Our Kids Safe on the Streets




We Can't Master Street Safety!  

Teaching Nick street safety has been one of the hardest skills to teach yet!  His lack of understanding danger, his short attention span and how easily he is distracted or just in his head all combine to make teaching safety a nightmare for us. We've done all kinds of things to teach street safety; from playing Red Light Green Light and having his sister smash into him when he moved on a red light, to walking intersections over and over.  Now we are back to trying to reach via Video (since video's are Nicks favorite thing(. 

We made our own videos so he could hear and see things he is familiar with. I posted them online. Maybe they will work for you, or serve as a  guide to follow.   

Now we have expanded to other online resources...



If you have any tips on what has worked for your family, please post them in comments!

Illuminating the Spectrum - Autism. A parents perspective on wandering.

Illuminating the Spectrum - Autism. A parents perspective on wandering.  You all know my topic of late to obsess upon has been wandering and the dangers our children face.  Seems my research has uncovered more promises than results. If you're following this topic you might want to read this recently published op ed piece.

Examiner.com: Simply illuminating the spectrum

DOJ to Fund Tracking Devices for Autistic Children

Dept. of Justice to Fund Tracking Devices for Autistic Children

 "Avonte's Law" would fund a program to provide voluntary tracking devices for autistic children who wander.
"Avonte's Law" would fund a program to provide voluntary tracking devices for autistic children who wander.
View Full Caption
NYPD
The Department of Justice said it will immediately fund a program to provide voluntary tracking devices for autistic children in the wake of Avonte Oquendo's disappearance.
Sen. Charles Schumer announced Sunday that heplans to introduce "Avonte's Law" — named for the autistic Queens teen who died after going missing in the fall — which would allocate $10 million for the devices nationwide.  
At a congressional hearing on Wednesday, Attorney General Eric Holder agreed to immediately begin paying for the devices with existing DOJ grant funds, according to Schumer.
The money for the nationwide program will come from a $400 million pool that already provides grants to local law enforcement agencies nationwide for Alzheimer's Disease tracking devices and will open those funds up to cover autism tracking devices, training and education programs, a Schumer spokesman said.
The grants are available to law enforcement agencies that apply for them. It is not clear how much they would cost.
The senator still plans to push for passage of "Avonte's Law" in order to get a separate and dedicated stream of funding for the program, his spokesman said.
The program would be run by local police departments which would distribute the tracking devices. Their use would be entirely at the discretion of parents, Schumer said.
The GPS devices would be monitored by a third party that would respond in the case of an emergency.
Statistics show that "bolting" is common among autistic children and teens, Schumer said, saying 49 percent of people on the autism spectrum attempt to run or wander off at some point.
"The sights and sounds of NYC and other busy places can be over-stimulating and distracting for children and teens with autism, often leading to wandering as a way to escape," Schumer said in a statement.
"Voluntary tracking devices will help our teachers and parents in the event that the child runs away and, God forbid, goes missing."
Avonte, who was autistic and could not communicate verbally, went missing afterrunning out of an open door at his Long Island City high school on Oct. 4.
His disappearance sparked a massive citywide search effort that ended last week when remains discovered on a beach in College Point were positively identified as those of the missing 14-year-old.

Wandering...Let's Create A Safety Net for our Kids!

Since 2011, 41 American children with autism have died after wandering, or “bolting,” from caregivers. Water is often a fatal draw for these children. Since April of this year, 14 out of 16 deaths were from drowning. Yet, there is still a hugh lack of awareness or understanding about wandering in our schools and communities. Even familiy members struggle to wrap their brains around how easily a child - determined to wander - can get out of even the safest home. 

I've share this video before in hopes that it would make its way to more local EMT's and help us to create a safety net for our kids. Given heart wrenching events in the news lately I wanted to share this again.


 And for those of you who want to learn more about the problem, or help others to learn here's a great video on Autism and Wandering.  

Autism and Wandering video


Wandering is a Major Concern of Parents with Children with Autism

Lauren Nassef

Since 2011, 41 American Children with Autism have died after wandering, or bolting from caregivers. And there is still no sign of Avonte, and as everyday pass's I look more to my faith and try to block out the facts that hold little hope and pray this won't happen to another of our kids, although I know it will. Wake Up America! 


I think people need to know we live in fear, of what will happen, not if, but when our kids wander. Or how absolutely inadequate our tools and resources are to keep them safe, or how much this is not a function of good or bad parenting but rather a question of how long can we avoid the inevitable. Our kids wander and no one can watch someone every minute, no matter how good of a parent you are.

I consider myself a good parent, and I've been there. I will never forget the day my son went missing in a busy beach community. I went to return our rental bike, and he stood with a family member on the sidewalk of the main highway through town.  I returned the bike, headed back to where I left him and he wasn't there!. Seemed he said "he was going to see mom" and walked away. No one thought much of it, as I was only 20 or 30 feet away.  But, when I heard it, I knew it was not okay. Suddenly, I was running on all cylinders fueled by an adrenaline rush I will never forget. It was an out of body experience lead by pure instinct.  It was like a checklist, stop, look, listen and smell! 

My ears listened for anything that would give me a clue; a Nick noise, a siren, honking, tires screeching. There was nothing. 

My eyes scanned the area to see if any people were gathered looking at something, or if there was any unusual activity that would give me a clue and nothing. 

My legs took me to where I had been at the bike stand, no Nick. Then I headed right to the major intersection to see if he was trapped in people or a crosswalk....and no Nick.

With the obvious checked off, I paused to think. First, I had to stop the awful images that were flooding my brain; that someone had just walked off with him, or that any second I would hear the sound of screeching tires followed but a crash, or the vision of him walking into the ocean.  I focused and thought, what would I do if I were Nick? What's here of interest to me?  I did a quick scan of the area and two things hit me; two things I could smell, the ocean and pizza - two of his favorites.

I sent a family member to cross the boardwalk to check the beach...the water. I went in search of the restaurant responsible for the pizza smell. I spotted an Italian restaurant across the street which sent a serge of panic through me that started in my stomach. I got to the restaurant and began looking for a 8 year old eating pizza..nothing. Then my eye's went toward the kitchen and a family was staring at me. They had that look I've seen so many times - the "there's an unusual kid here, he's too close, he's behaving in ways we don't like and maybe he's yours" look - and it gave me hope I was in the right spot. I continued to look and listen, and before I saw him I heard him he made a Nick noise and then I found him. He was just wandering looking for pizza. I had never been so happy that he was a pizza fanatic in my life! People stared at both of us, no one understanding what they were seeing.  So there I was, no community to recognize him and nothing on him to connect him to me; that is the problem we have to solve.  

 Lori McIlwain is the executive director of the National Autism Association wrote a piece that appeared in the New York Times today...pretty dead on. A great read that puts the situation into perspective.   Thanks Lori for speaking for all of us! 

New York Times, Editorial 
Wandering is a Major Concern of Parents with Children with Autism
By LORI McILWAIN
NOW in its sixth week, the search for Avonte Oquendo, a 14-year-old boy from Queens with autism, is shining a light on the issue of wandering among people with autism. On Oct. 4, Avonte managed to slip away after lunch from his school in Long Island City — even though he was known to wander during classroom transitions.
While most people associate wandering with elderly sufferers from Alzheimer’s or other types of dementia, a recent study published in the journal Pediatrics found that 49 percent of children with autism were prone to the behavior. Given the prevalence of autism — at one in 88 children, or one in 50 school-age children — it’s clear this is an everyday concern for many thousands of parents.
The day Avonte went missing, a Friday, a 12-year-old boy with autism was in a medically induced coma in Oakland, Calif. According to reports, he had wandered from his mother in a parking lot and entered eastbound traffic on I-580, where he was struck by at least one vehicle. By Sunday, another child with autism had gone missing: 5-year-old Devonte Dye wandered from his grandparents’ home in southeast Missouri. Tragically, he was found the next day, drowned, in a slough near the St. Francis River.
Since 2011, 41 American children with autism have died after wandering, or “bolting,” from caregivers. Water is often a fatal draw for these children. Since April of this year, 14 out of 16 deaths were from drowning 
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