15 April 2008 - 17:44Good article on insurance and Autism

This is from Devine Caroline in a blog under parenting titled: Who’s (Not) Paying for Autism Treatment?<-Click for article.

A decade ago, autism, a developmental disorder that can chronically alter a child’s social interactions, communication and learning skills, and behavior, was a rare and poorly understood disorder. The diagnosis came with few treatment options and poor prognosis for improvement. Children who never learned to speak or care for themselves were sometimes institutionalized.

Even though most clinicians and researchers agree that early, intensive therapy—such as teaching behavioral skills and positive reinforcement—make a big difference in an autistic person’s overall outcome, most private insurance companies don’t cover it. In fact, autism is usually an excluded diagnosis, even though treatments are often covered under other diagnoses.

A well written, informative article without any drama.
At the end of the blog are several important links.

No Comments | Tags: Lifestream

12 April 2008 - 13:05Ad Industry Bans Targeting People With Cancer

From BITS NYT:  Ad Industry Bans Targeting People With Cancer; Ads to Widows and Orphans Allowed

A group of advertising companies is proposing restrictions on monitoring users’ Web surfing on some sensitive topics. Cancer and sexual orientation are on the list. It said targeting ads based on “political affiliation” or “death” is sometimes acceptable.

The essence of the proposal is to identify sensitive subjects that advertising companies should not keep track of. Here is the list:
1) Certain medical/health conditions–
* HIV/ AIDS status
* Sexually-related conditions (e.g., sexually transmitted diseases, erectile
* dysfunction)
* Psychiatric conditions
* Cancer status
* Abortion-related

2) Certain personal life information–
* Sexual behavior/orientation/identity (i.e., Lesbian/Gay/Bisexual/Transgender)
* Criminal victim status (e.g., rape victim status)

The following subjects are a matter left up to the individual advertiser.
Age, addictions (e.g., drugs, alcohol, gambling), nationality, criminal history, death, disability, ethnic affiliation, marital status, philosophical beliefs, political affiliation or opinions, pregnancy, race identification, religious affiliation (or lack thereof), trade union membership

The whole point of this is to try and preempt an attempt by the Federal Trade Commission to impose their own guidelines.

Mr. Hughes of the Network Advertising Initiative wrote back to explain the “death” category:
” We were thinking about people who were making funeral arrangements or otherwise attending to issues related to the death of a loved one.”

The major problem as I see it is the amount of leeway given to people I consider to be spammers, and the fact that companies like Tribal Fusion are not members and so will not be bound by the proposed regulations.

“Hi: I’m the fox. Let me design the security for your new hen house.”

No Comments | Tags: Lifestream

10 April 2008 - 12:33An Inconvenient World

My fairly casual reading on Autism has led me to some interesting places. Most of which have nothing to do with the original affliction.

Today on a blog titled My Cancer hosted by NPR I came across the writings of someone dealing with the disease and reporting on it from their perspective on a regular basis.
The title I chose comes from their blog of April 10, 2008.

An Inconvenient World

“The world is not made for people who are in discomfort or pain. It’s certainly not made for the disabled. ”

We have all known victims of devastating diseases. Most of them start out with the usual fit of denial. Then they get into a poor me frame of mind and some of them never get over it.

The author of My Cancer seems to be dealing with it as calmly and rationally as anyone in that position could ever be expected to.

His comments on little things like the mat at Johns Hopkins, the hospital bathrooms not being accessible, automatic door problems and low chairs, remind me of all the time I’ve spent in hospitals.

My time in hospital has rarely been because there was anything wrong with me, but instead has been sitting with friends and relatives. This makes my perspective different.
If anything, ill designed bathrooms, malfunctioning doors, low chairs and a host of overworked and sometimes incompetent staff makes me angrier than it does the people I am visiting.

As patients they all seem to have developed a certain sense of resignation. While I tend to be of the opinion that hospitals are supposed to take care of people not just warehouse them.
(I also expect Dr Kildare, not Frank Burns, speaking some unintelligible language they purport to be English.)

Reading this blog reminds me that there is always someone coping with an inconvenient world.
It also humanizes a subject that is rarely addressed except in the abstract.

No Comments | Tags: Lifestream

6 April 2008 - 15:22I Speak of Dreams -Blog

I just received a comment about the Autism lawsuit from Liz Ditz of the blog, I Speak of Dreams.
Until a few minutes ago this was one of the many sites I had never heard of.

Her tagline describes her site well.
Passions: Effective parenting and education, learning disabilities, non-profit management, horses, and fun!

Her posts tend to be very short(with links to the pertinent sites) but they demonstrate a passion for her subject matter and a good sense of humor.

While I haven’t yet made up my mind about her blog as a whole, I highly recommend her blog on the lawsuit. —In it she includes links to numerous sites that have covered the subject to one degree or another, as well as a link to the subpoena.

After you’ve had all the depressing lawsuit information you can stand. Return to her site and follows the links to SIWOTI Syndrome or Equestrian Humor.

1 Comment | Tags: Lifestream

6 April 2008 - 6:31Autism Lawsuit

This is something I believe needs to be read and researched:

Kathleen Seidel wrote a blog on neurodiversity.com about a lawsuit brought forth by Rev. Lisa Sykes and Seth Sykes claiming that vaccines caused their child’s autism.

From Ars Technica:
Despite the fact that all evidence points against the existence of a link, some parents of autistic children have pursued both “cures” for mercury poisoning and lawsuits against vaccine manufacturers.

Now they are going after Ms Seidel. It appears to be primarily because of this paragraph:

“And thus the Sykes’ legal odyssey continues ad infinitum — a hydra-headed quest for revenge, for compensation, and for judicial validation of autism causation theories roundly rejected by the greater scientific community, by numerous courts, and by a great number of individuals and families whose interests they purport to represent.”

This is from Ars Technica:
In late March, Siedel received a subpoena that seeks her appearance as part of the lawsuit. Should the subpoena stand, Siedel would also have to produce documents regarding the financial operations of Neurodiversity and any contacts with the government or pharmaceutical industry, other members of the autism blogging community, or scientific journals. Bizarrely, Siedel would also have to produce any “communication with any religious groups (Muslim or otherwise)”—this may be related to the fact that one half of the couple is an ordained minister in the United Methodist Church.

It appears to me to be a case of parents looking for someone or something to blame and lashing out at whoever disagrees.

1 Comment | Tags: Lifestream

30 March 2008 - 10:04Autism

I read this on CNN.com/us.

“How was your day?” Soma asks.

Before Tito can answer, he obsessively moves around the house, placing the TV remote in its proper place, arranging the salt and pepper shakers just so. Then he sits down in front of his specially designed keyboard to type his response.

“It was like a floating kangaroo that kept itself invisible,” Tito answers.

Tito is Autistic, a poet, an author and his mother’s first pupil.
In his writings, he explains why he doesn’t make eye contact, what it is like to be obsessed with a ceiling fan, and how his brain has trouble processing sound, touch and sight all at once.

His mother refused to accept his condition and finally adopted a method of teaching that is called the Rapid Prompting Method.

She was so successful that she now teaches at the HALO — Helping Autism through Learning and Outreach — center in Austin, Texas.

I have known families with autistic children, but I had never heard of this method before. The children I have known were medicated, given minimal therapy or mostly ignored.

Whether Tito is particularly gifted or this method can work with all but the most severely autistic children I don’t know, but it does give a glimmer of hope.

No Comments | Tags: Lifestream

9 March 2008 - 12:52covertress: The 10 Commandments of Counterintelligence

covertress: The 10 Commandments of Counterintelligence
Definitely worth a read.
Of course they left out the eleventh commandment that applies to all sets of commandments: Thou shalt not get caught.

No Comments | Tags: Lifestream

29 February 2008 - 7:41The Junk Drawer » We Were Almost a Nielsen Family

The Junk Drawer » We Were Almost a Nielsen Family
My husband Dave and I received a thick, official-looking envelope from the Nielsen Ratings Company last weekend. The Nielsen ratings system measures television viewership in the United States. The information they gather establishes commercial advertising prices and determines which shows stay or go in the program lineup.

This is how to handle persistent sales people.

I suppose it’s more politically correct than a 45 and “you’ve got 30 seconds to get off my property.” –But it’s not nearly as much fun.

No Comments | Tags: Lifestream

28 February 2008 - 18:37London man uses air miles for space trip

London man uses air miles for space trip - UPI.com
The trip cost 2 million frequent flier miles, compared to the 90,000 miles required for a first-class flight from London to New York.
2 million air miles, I wonder if he can remember where he lives?

No Comments | Tags: Lifestream

27 February 2008 - 16:13Comcast and the FCC meeting

In reference to the FCC hearings:
Comcast spokeswoman Jennifer Khoury said that the company paid some people to arrive early and hold places in the queue for local Comcast employees who wanted to attend the hearing.

Here’s the explanation from a Comcast spokesperson:
The company didn’t intend to block anyone from attending the hearing. “Comcast informed our local employees about the hearing and invited them to attend,” she said. “Some employees did attend, along with many members of the general public.”

Translation: “Yeah we paid our employees to be there and only a few of them showed, so we hired a bunch of strangers off the street to make sure enough seats were taken so that the people who filed against us wouldn’t be able to get inside. –What’s it to you?”

A number of people in the audience wore yellow highlighter marking pens on their shirts or jackets; Free Press campaign director Timothy Karr said that was to identify them to Comcast employees coordinating the company’s appearance at the event. Khoury acknowledged that Comcast coordinated the employees that it brought to the hearing.
—-Maybe the yellow highlighters were the only way to tell their employees from street people.

This video giving their opinion of the event is from savetheinternet.com.

For the article from the CONDÉ NAST PORTFOLIO: Click here.

No Comments | Tags: Lifestream