У нас вы можете посмотреть бесплатно Autism and Medical Issues: How Medical Issues Impact Problem Behavior или скачать в максимальном доступном качестве, которое было загружено на ютуб. Для скачивания выберите вариант из формы ниже:
Если кнопки скачивания не
загрузились
НАЖМИТЕ ЗДЕСЬ или обновите страницу
Если возникают проблемы со скачиванием, пожалуйста напишите в поддержку по адресу внизу
страницы.
Спасибо за использование сервиса savevideohd.ru
Mary Barbera discusses autism and medical issues and how medical issues impact problem behaviors. Sign up for a free workshop to start turning autism around: https://bit.ly/3vd5yKE Subscribe to get more insightful videos about #autism and related topics at: https://goo.gl/cGSdxX We all have experience with autism and medical issues but what do you do if you have a child who doesn't communicate and you think they might be in pain? Some children might bite when they’re in distress, and other children might become aggressive. But without the language to tell us how they feel, a child on the spectrum is unable to express what exactly hurts. When Lucas was a child, one day we realized that he had little wounds all over his leg, but they weren’t mosquito bites. And the next thing we knew, he had these strange verbal tics. As a trained nurse, I thought it was related to a medical issue because it came on so suddenly, so I started counting the verbal tics. I was able to count over 500 verbal tics in a day, so I knew that this wasn’t my imagination. It did end up being an infection, and with antibiotics, his tics cleared up. The four steps of the Turn Autism Around approach are going to help you work through any medical issues that you face: Step one: Assess to find out what problems you need to tackle. Step two: Make a plan to teach your child what they need to do to stay healthy. Step three: Teach: have practice sessions helping your child learn to swallow a pill or wear a mask or whatever the goals are. Step four: Use easy data to see if you’re making any progress in helping them. Use a calendar to document changes in behavior, medications, and doctor visits. In today’s video you’ll learn: -The importance of keeping track of behaviors, medications, doctor visits, and medical tests as you figure out how to help your child. -Strategies you can use to help a child on the spectrum communicate when they’re in pain and where that pain is located. -Resources you can explore to help you improve your child’s eating habits, medicine consumption, and ability to talk about their body parts. Subscribe on Facebook for more free resources: https://bit.ly/3v6kH00 If you enjoyed this video about autism and medical issues, and want more autism podcast episodes like this one, be sure to subscribe to the channel, like this video and visit my website below. If you have more questions, leave them down in the comments section, and I will do my best to answer you. Thanks for watching today's video blog, and let's #turnautismaround together! Interested in learning more about teaching a child with autism, special needs parenting, or other autism and special needs topics in the mental health in children niche? Visit us: https://bit.ly/2QoDTrh Contact us: [email protected] You can also connect with us at: Facebook: https://MaryBarbera.com/facebook Twitter: https://MaryBarbera.com/twitter Instagram: https://MaryBarbera.com/instagram Pinterest: https://MaryBarbera.com/pinterest LinkedIn: https://MaryBarbera.com/linkedin Dr. Mary Barbera. I fell into the autism world as an autism mom in 1999 when her first-born son, Lucas, was diagnosed with autism. Since then, she became a Board-Certified Behavior Analyst and best-selling author of The Verbal Behavior Approach. Since 2015, she’s created 3 autism online courses based on applied behavior analysis for professionals and "gung-ho" parents. Whether you’re looking for autism parenting strategies, working with development delays in children, or in search of autism help for professionals, I can encourage you to subscribe to the channel and join me on my journey. I’ll be providing weekly autism resources that you don’t want to miss.