While all parents celebrate their children’s milestones and major life events, parents of children with special needs also celebrate inchstones - those tiny little milestones no bigger than an inch but every bit as significant.
Parent Alert: The Best Thing You Can Do Is Let Your Child Fail We have become a part of a parenting generation where we do everything in our power to make sure our children are included and they win. We have tried to protect our children from sadness, frustration, disappointment, heartbreak and any other non-positive… Continue reading Letting Your Child Fail
Summer Camp Offerings for Children with Special Needs Summer is awesome! No school! No schedule! No need to be anywhere at any particular time! But also, summer is tough. No school. No schedule. No need to be anywhere. If you have a child with special needs, routine and familiarity are crucial and summer can often… Continue reading Summer Camps for Children with Special Needs
Your Shield HealthCare care team supports your most fragile patients with Enteral+Oxygen Did You Know… In the United States, 1 in 10 births are preterm (born before 37th week of pregnancy). 10% to 15% of all babies born require special care in the NICU. Approximately 3 million children are medically complex. What is a medically… Continue reading Transitioning Medically Complex Children From Hospital Care To Home Care
Anxiety can be a debilitating emotional experience. It has the ability to take a pleasant moment and turn it into a disaster with all of the “what if’s” that could happen. Anxiety lies and it creates a sense of danger or incredible discomfort in daily life that is exhausting and can be debilitating and limiting.… Continue reading Anxiety in Children: Accommodating Your Anxious Child in School and at Home
I did not grow up on a farm. But I spent all my summers on one in rural Oklahoma. My grandparents turned their plot of red dirt into acres of corn and okra and tomatoes. The garden was sacred. You don’t pull a carrot too soon and you don’t climb the peach tree without permission.… Continue reading Five Life Lessons Gardening Can Teach Your Child
This new law will increase airplane lavatory accessibility for those with disabilities. Here’s how you can help. On March 18th, 2022 The U.S. Department of Transportation announced a proposed rule to increase access to lavatories on single-aisle airplanes for people with disabilities. The law would require each airplane to include one bathroom that is accessible… Continue reading This New Law Will Increase Airplane Lavatory Accessibility
Once a year, I begin the process of mentally and emotionally steeling myself for my son Charlie’s annual IEP evaluation at school. It’s usually March, when the buds on the trees pop and crocus determinedly push forth. Spring is a celebration of survival. We have made it through the dark and the cold. The world… Continue reading Please, Watch Your Language
As mothers and parents, we can bear (or raise) multiple children, and yet each and every one is so different. Let’s take eating, for example. I have three children with three very different preferences and aversions right from the start. Just because one child enjoys certain foods, another one of your children may find the… Continue reading Feeding Strategies for Picky Eaters
The week before winter break, my son Charlie came down with a cough. Nothing to be concerned about initially. It was dry, sporadic, and his mood was good. “At least he doesn’t have a fever,” I said to my spouse in an attempt to assuage the fears that were politely but insistently knocking at heart… Continue reading Five Feeding Strategies for a Sick Kid