what to do after diagnosis

Hello i am just looking for guidance really, we have been back and forth to the doctors since our son was 2, he had speech therapy and always seemed diffrent to our other children, very unsettled and on edge most of the time, cutting a long list of problems short and getting to the point we have a few weeks ago had a DISCO appointment with the Pediatrician who asked lots of questions about our son and his time since he was born(he is 6 now) , we received a letter a few weeks later from the doctor saying diagnosis ASD refere to CAMHS (hope that is the correct spelling), so now what do i do iv gone to school and asked if my son needs a statement and as he has special help reading already and he is supposed to be on par with his maths they say he will not get statemented as the council is trying to phase it out and they have no concerns with him in other areas urgh, my whole time and appointments for this diagnosis was to get him extra help in school so he can be where he should be instead of dragging behind in class, he has not got the attention span to keep up in my opinion but school are making me feel like im fussing over nothing(well someone needs to be the slowest in class and it will be him if help isnt given) his efforts that he puts in is not reflected in his ability that he gets out of class.

anyway i am refered to CAHMS even though i have heard nothing other than this what should i be doing next, i feel funny about bringing benefits up as it as it was the school help i wanted and now im not going to get it i feel in a flap.

Parents
  • Hi there - definately push for a Statement.  It is true that the councils try to save money - my son's Early Years Support worker told me he would be 'borderline' in terms of getting a statement but we insisted, badgered everyone until it was done and got plenty of hours.  He is now 6 and his current form teacher nearly choked when I told her about the 'borderline' comment.  If you are struggling, try to get him in front of an educational psychologist - of all the reports written that was definately the most powerful.  A harrowing read but mighty handy when you are trying to get funding.

    Refusing Statements is so short-sighted.  We parents are all fighting against the high levels of unemployment in adults with autism.  I argued that if they put the money in now, my son would pay everything back in income tax when his education pays off and he gets out into the world of work.

    Best of luck with this - keep badgering people - if you are turned down, appeal .... they'll give in before you do....!

Reply
  • Hi there - definately push for a Statement.  It is true that the councils try to save money - my son's Early Years Support worker told me he would be 'borderline' in terms of getting a statement but we insisted, badgered everyone until it was done and got plenty of hours.  He is now 6 and his current form teacher nearly choked when I told her about the 'borderline' comment.  If you are struggling, try to get him in front of an educational psychologist - of all the reports written that was definately the most powerful.  A harrowing read but mighty handy when you are trying to get funding.

    Refusing Statements is so short-sighted.  We parents are all fighting against the high levels of unemployment in adults with autism.  I argued that if they put the money in now, my son would pay everything back in income tax when his education pays off and he gets out into the world of work.

    Best of luck with this - keep badgering people - if you are turned down, appeal .... they'll give in before you do....!

Children
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