Close X
Friday, October 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

Ontario Kids With Autism Aged 5 And Older Cut Off Of Government-Paid Therapy

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 Apr, 2016 12:25 PM
    TORONTO — Ontario children with autism aged five or older no longer qualify for government-funded intensive therapy, a move critics say is leaving many families in the lurch.
     
    The Liberal government has announced a new Ontario Autism Program with $333 million in funding, but changes include limiting Intensive Behavioural Intervention to children between two and four.
     
    Children and Youth Services Minister Tracy MacCharles says advice from experts was to focus on children in that developmental window.
     
    She says the government will also be launching early-intervention diagnosis pilots to get kids diagnosed and on the wait list for treatment sooner, and families with kids five and older on the IBI wait list will get $8,000 to pay for treatment.
     
    Lisa Meunier, a Brampton, Ont., mom whose nearly five-year old daughter has been on the IBI wait list for almost three years, says that amount will only pay for a few weeks of therapy.
     
    The government says the changes mean that 16,000 more children will get access to services, mostly Applied Behaviour Analysis, a less intensive form of therapy.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    WestJet Faces Potential Class-action Lawsuit Over Alleged Workplace Harassment

    WestJet Faces Potential Class-action Lawsuit Over Alleged Workplace Harassment
    Former Westjet Flight Attendant Accuses The Company Of Fostering A Corporate Culture That Tolerates Harassment Against Female Flight Attendants And Silences Alleged Victims

    WestJet Faces Potential Class-action Lawsuit Over Alleged Workplace Harassment

    Mexico-Born B.C. Construction Worker Plants Mexican Flag On Roof Of Vancouver’s Trump Tower

    Mexico-Born B.C. Construction Worker Plants Mexican Flag On Roof Of Vancouver’s Trump Tower
    Mexican-born construction worker says he hung his native country's flag high above Vancouver to remind Donald Trump that his compatriots built the 63-storey tower.

    Mexico-Born B.C. Construction Worker Plants Mexican Flag On Roof Of Vancouver’s Trump Tower

    Shooting In Surrey Sends Man To Hospital

    Shooting In Surrey Sends Man To Hospital
    In a third consecutive incident Surrey today saw another shooting in a brazen daylight that put a man in hospital.

    Shooting In Surrey Sends Man To Hospital

    Ontario Elementary Students To Get Five Hours A Week Of Math Instruction

    Ontario Elementary Students To Get Five Hours A Week Of Math Instruction
    Education Minister says the province will spend $60 million to help students improve their test results in math

    Ontario Elementary Students To Get Five Hours A Week Of Math Instruction

    TransCanada Shuts Down KeyStone Pipeline After Oil Spill In South Dakota

    TransCanada Shuts Down KeyStone Pipeline After Oil Spill In South Dakota
    The pipeline, which carries about 500,000 barrels of oil a day, was shut down in minutes

    TransCanada Shuts Down KeyStone Pipeline After Oil Spill In South Dakota

    Rental Housing Is For Residents, Says Vancouver Councillor Eyeing Airbnb Rules

    Rental Housing Is For Residents, Says Vancouver Councillor Eyeing Airbnb Rules
    Coun. Geoff Meggs wants to expand and accelerate a study already underway by city staff on the effect Airbnb and similar websites are having on the supply of rental housing.

    Rental Housing Is For Residents, Says Vancouver Councillor Eyeing Airbnb Rules