Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

This Holiday Season, Give Your Time To Change A Life

28 Dec, 2019 06:44 AM

    This is Anna McMahon’s story. It illustrates how a few hours of volunteering a week can transform the lives of children and youth for the better.

     

    It all started when Anna saw how a family member living with autism spectrum disorder struggled to find community support and one-on-one care. People with this disorder often find it challenging to interact and communicate with others.


    But proper supports can help improve social interaction and quality of life. This struggle ignited a passion in Anna for helping children with neurodevelopmental disorders. It brought her to study psychology at the University of Victoria and join the university’s child development laboratory and Kids Brain Health Network as a volunteer.


    Her volunteering also helped Anna complete her undergraduate honours thesis. She worked on a video game treatment program called Dino Island. This fun, educational game helps children and teenagers with neurodevelopmental disorders build their attention skills, memory, mental control and self-regulation, which are instrumental in learning, mental health and growth. She also had the opportunity to deliver the game to a teenager living with autism and intellectual disability. The experience changed both their lives.


    For 16 hours over eight weeks, Anna met the teenager to play the multi-level game. It consists of five mini games that increase in difficulty as the user progresses and that adapt to the user’s performance. This helps to retrain the brain and improve skills in targeted areas. Throughout the game, Anna also taught the teenager problem-solving strategies to help him succeed through the levels. Examples include repeating the items the teenager needed to collect several times to stimulate memory and coaching him to take deep breaths or go for a walk if he felt overwhelmed.


    Gradually, Anna saw the teenager transform into someone who has higher levels of attention and confidence and who is able to use the strategies at school to control his emotions and feelings. These changes go a long way to helping children and youth with neurodevelopmental disorders with relationship-building, learning and overall independence as they grow up.


    “Being able to deliver the game to the teenager was an amazing experience. I watched him transform from being shy to being excited and happy when he would see me come to his house to play the game,” Anna said. “I was also excited to hear that in only a few weeks, his school saw significant progress. This experience was proof that I was on the right path and it inspired me to continue making programs and games like Dino Island become more accessible and affordable to everyone.”


    Anna’s journey has just begun. Under the guidance of Sarah Macoun, a pediatric neuropsychologist at the University of Victoria, and her involvement with Kids Brain Health Network, Anna has gained valuable learning skills and experience. While she still volunteers and is a trainee supported by Kids Brain Health, she also works with another organization to help children with autism spectrum disorder. Her goal is to go to graduate school and become an occupational therapist.


    “Stories like Anna’s are a reminder of how important it is to help others when we can. Our government continues to support British Columbians living with neurodevelopmental disorders, especially children and youth, by providing funding to organizations such as Kids Brain Health Network,” said Adrian Dix, Minister of Health. “A special thank you to Anna and all the volunteers for your dedication and your contributions in bringing meaningful change in the lives of the people living with these disorders and their families.”


    The B.C. government supports British Columbians with autism spectrum disorder and other neurodevelopmental disorders. In 2019, the Province provided Kids Brain Health with $437,000 to help children and youth improve their chances of achieving the most developmental gains possible and reaching their highest potential.


    Volunteering is a free and easy way to bring meaningful change to the lives of kids with autism spectrum disorder and their families. To learn more about how to volunteer, email: info@kidsbrainhealth.ca and maccounlab@uvic.ca

    MORE National ARTICLES

    2 Arrested After Fake $100 Bills Seized In Counterfeiting Bust: Delta Police

    Reports of counterfeit money in various denominations being passed in the Delta area prompted a police investigation dubbed “Fictus Denarios” (Latin for false coins).

    2 Arrested After Fake $100 Bills Seized In Counterfeiting Bust: Delta Police

    4 In Custody After Stabbing In Abbotsford’s Riverside Road

    4 In Custody After Stabbing In Abbotsford’s Riverside Road
    On Dec 15 at 7:07 pm, Abbotsford  Emergency Services were called to the 1900 block of Riverside Road where witnesses located a man laying on the roadway.    

    4 In Custody After Stabbing In Abbotsford’s Riverside Road

    Vancouver's German Christmas Market Celebrates 10-Year Anniversary

    The Vancouver Christmas Market brought this holiday tradition to the city's drizzly downtown core 10 years ago. This Yuletide, organizers are celebrating the anniversary with their biggest market yet.    

    Vancouver's German Christmas Market Celebrates 10-Year Anniversary

    Sentence Hearing Begins For B.C. Dad Convicted Of Killing Two Young Daughters

    A British Columbia Supreme Court jury convicted Berry in September of two counts of second-degree murder in the 2017 killing of four-year-old Aubrey and six-year-old Chloe.    

    Sentence Hearing Begins For B.C. Dad Convicted Of Killing Two Young Daughters

    Premier John Horgan Recognizes PICS Board Chair Resham (Paul) Dosanjh

    Premier John Horgan visited PICS Seniors Housing facility to honour PICS Board Chair, Resham (Paul) Dosanjh for his exceptional contributions

    Premier John Horgan Recognizes PICS Board Chair Resham (Paul) Dosanjh

    Toronto Woman Sharanjit Kaur Killed By Her Friend Navdeep Singh Was From Jalandhar

    Sharanjit Kaur was a resident of Bhandhala village near Noormahal in Jalandhar, and her friend Navdeep Singh of Khilchian village in Amritsar.    

    Toronto Woman Sharanjit Kaur Killed By Her Friend Navdeep Singh Was From Jalandhar