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Spring
2008
- In this Issue: Developmental Interventions --FITP Supplemental From Our Director Oral Health Care Family Voices of Vermont DD Council Grants PIC Conference Review Walkathon & Thanks |
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We began with FITP when we noticed our son was not staying on par with his peers at daycare. He was slow with motor skills development, speech, cognition, and spatial awareness. We contacted FITP on advice of a friend, and they responded quickly. The value of their visits did more than benefit him. They helped us to sort through our feelings of grief and to identify our focus on early intervention. I suppose this was our greatest gift from the FITP team: understanding the power of advocacy for our child. We recognized specific developmental delays, voiced them as our concerns, and the team responded to help us with them. A relationship that had some growing pains, but we kept our focus on the benefactor. And boy did he show it! Now, you may wonder why I have been deliberate about omitting the names that would put faces on the players in our story. First, I think it is important for everyone in FITP to know that whether you were on our team or not, you helped us. No names needed. Our team was filled with special people who were motivated by our advocacy, or who provided their own voices to our cause. The people who came to our rescue were not hand picked by us through interview or our design. They were the folks on duty when we called for help. Like the fire department, or ambulance squad, you answered. Second, I think it is important to say we know of your value because in your absence, we feel a hole. Our boy has turned three, aged out of your services, and we have moved into a new world. A world that would benefit greatly by your example, and with any persistence, will. Anonymity in this acknowledgment preserves our new delicate relationship with a school system that now provides (or tries to provide) for our son. They cannot be our adversaries at the same time we place our boy in their care and services. Our advocacy has met their politics. To affect his outcome, we now (all) must fight for change in policy. For us, as parents, and for you as members of this team (crusade), our quest is for
developmental interventions with meaning for each child in time to support them on
the steps to the schoolhouse on the first day of kindergarten. Our new experiences - S. J.’s Mom and Dad. © |
Spring 2008 - In this Issue: Developmental Interventions |
What is The Family, Infant, and Toddler Program (FITP)?A statewide family-centered system of early intervention for children from birth to three who have or may have a condition leading to a delay in development. All families with any question or concern about their child’s development are encouraged to contact FITP. See contact information for Chittenden County. Other persons who work with children, e.g., doctors, child care providers, also refer children and their families to FITP. What happens when I refer a child to FITP?An FITP staff member will phone the child’s parents or guardians to learn more about the child and to schedule an initial interview with the family. An initial interview with the family, during which FITP staff learn more about the child and family and discuss with the family evaluations of the child that would be helpful to complete. Evaluations of the child, usually at home or at child care, to determine if the child has a measurable or observable delay which makes the child eligible for services. An eligibility meeting with the family to discuss the evaluations, and, if the child is eligible for services, to develop an Individualized Family Service Plan (IFSP) for the child and family. If the child is not eligible for services, the meeting focuses on other options for support, including helping the family to connect with other community services. If the child is eligible, the family will have a service coordinator and services for the child, which may include some or all of the following: education and support, community resources, social work, developmental education, speech and language therapy, occupational therapy, physical therapy, medical evaluations, health services, vision services, audiology, psychological services and assistive technology. Services are primarily provided to children and their families in natural environments including their homes, childcare settings and community settings. Who pays for FITP?FITP is a national, federally mandated program available to all children and families who need it without cost to the individual children and their families. Everyone pays for FITP through federal and state taxes. But, in recent years, federal funds have not kept pace with need. See Tables and Challenges below. How Many Children and Families Does FITP
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