How FASD Impacts Us All
As I was watching the news coverage around Bell’s Let’s Talk
campaign on mental illnesses, I was struck by the similarities between these
invisible disabilities and Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder. As a parent of a daughter with FASD and two
other children on the 15 month wait list for diagnosis, our entire lives are
centered by this disability. Our 100-acre
farm in the country, our children’s alternative schooling options, our work
situations of special education teacher and employment counselor, our network of
social services, and our extended family locations are all in place to help our
children with their disabilities.
Without these supports, we know our children would not achieve the same
level of success.
In a study done
by Svetlana Popova and funded by the Public Health Agency of Canada, over 75%
of people with FASD will struggle with the feel of things like clothing,
receiving and expressing communication, noise sensitivities and hearing loss,
and ADHD-like symptoms of hyperactivity, inattention, focus, anxiety and anger. FASD also lowers life expectancy by 10 years.
https://www.camh.ca/en/research/news_and...and.../Popova_etal2016Lancet.pdf However, a small study done in Alberta
placed life expectancy at 34 years due to at-risk behaviour associated with
mental illnesses. In a study of 80 birth
mothers with children born with FASD done by Astley, 2000, it was found 96% of
those mothers had a mental health disorder with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder
being the most common. However,
according to the Alberta Clinical Recommendations, 1999, supportive counseling
for mothers with a mental health disorder can reduce the risk of a FASD child
by more than half. FASD is listed as the
number one preventable disability and one of the very few disabilities that
can’t be passed from parent to child through genetics. Finally, FASD impacts 300,000 people in
Canada with approximately 70% of those people living in urban settings to the
cost of 4-6 billion dollars per year through health, education, social services
and justice systems.
But just like
with mental health disorders, FASD is a manageable disability as demonstrated
by our amazing children. My oldest
daughter is our animal whisperer.
Whether it is training the dog, the horses, the donkey, the cows, and
the pigs, she can handle them all. Through
her high school, she is gaining her credits through workplace environments and
at 17 years of age, she knows she does well in outside environments, doing
manual labour, avoiding the public and helping animals.
Our middle
daughter is the baker and babysitter.
With her unlimited optimism, ready smile, and patience galore, she also
has found her niche. We are so blessed
to be able to come home from work and have supper ready to go. We never are concerned about leaving the
children because we know our middle daughter will keep her head.
Our last child
is our buddy. He is the one who can watch
me do something once and immediately copy it.
He is the one who built a table at the age of nine using his hammer,
screwdrivers and saw. He will go to the
bush and chop down trees for hours.
However, they
also need supports and structure. Every
day of the week has a morning, afternoon, and evening routine. They work at places that don’t ask them to
problem solve. They get their direction
and they follow it. They have technology
that figures out money, time and locations for them. They use their computers to read and
write. They have tools, strategies and
medication to help them cope with anxiety, fear and anger. They also have mentors that help them
understand social cues and norms. They
all have quiet places they can go to relax, both at home and at school. Finally, they have friends and family who are
always ready to step in and listen.
While our
children have FASD, it is not what defines them. Just like anyone else, they have their
strengths and needs. And just like
anyone with a mental illness, they know they can’t do it by themselves. As our First Nations have said for centuries,
it takes a community to raise a child.
We must always be ready to listen and help. And when we see them succeed, we celebrate
their success because we know and appreciate what they have accomplished. And when they or anyone else in our community
succeeds, it impacts us all. If you
would like to learn more on how you can help, please attend the 1st
annual Eastern Ontario FASD Symposium March 31 and April 1 in Ottawa. https://www.citizenadvocacy.org/ourevents/first-annual-fasd-eastern-ontario-symposium/
Not only being
the father of three amazing children, Rob More is a special education teacher
and writes a blog called http://giveusmorespecialneeds.blogspot.ca/
where he is sharing his conversations
with the Ministry of Child and Youth Services and with his Member of Parliament
about FASD. He is also a regular
contributor to https://www.facebook.com/CitizenAdvocacy
site. He will also be sharing his
knowledge at the FASD Symposium in Ottawa as well and will be published in
Focus on Adoption Fall issue. https://www.bcadoption.com/focus-adoption-magazine
He also runs a summer tech camp for
special needs children. https://morehavenmakerspacecamp.blogspot.ca/
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