AAMR F.Y.I.
August 2006, Vol.6, No.8
Visit www.aamr.org/FYI/ to access current and past issues
of this monthly newsletter. Subscribe at http://www.responsetrack.net/aamr/sign_up
Dear AAMR Friends and Colleague:
U.S. GOVERNMENT EXEMPTS MEDICAID BENEFICIARIES IN NURSING HOMES AND INTERMEDIATE
CARE FACILITIES FROM CONTROVERSIAL PROOF-OF-CITIZENSHIP REQUIREMENTS
President Bush announced that the administration would exempt millions of the
most vulnerable Medicaid recipients in the United States, including persons with
mental retardation living in nursing homes, assisted living, and intermediate
care facilities, from a new law requiring proof of citizenship by showing a birth
certificate, passport, or other relevant documents. Critics of the law identify
dementia, lack of family contacts, and absence of paper trail as some of the
major challenges preventing residents with mental retardation from receiving
Medicaid benefits, had the law been applied to this group.
Read a press release from the National Center for Assisted Living and the American
Health Care Association (AHCA) applauding the administration on the exemption
at
http://www.ahca.org/news/nr060707.htm
Also in Medicaid news, the AHCA has published a report on the shortfall between
Medicaid reimbursement and allowable Medicaid costs for nursing homes in the
United States for the years 2003 and 2004. Read
A Report on Shortfalls in
Medicaid
Funding Nursing Home Care at
http://www.ahca.org/brief/seidmanstudy0606.pdf
THREE USERS OF THE SUPPORTS INTENSITY SCALE SHARE DIFFERENT, YET VALUABLE USES
OF THIS PLANNING TOOL FOR PERSONS WITH INTELLECTUAL DISABILITIES
Since its publication in 2004, the Supports Intensity Scale, an assessment tool
for persons with intellectual disabilities, has been adopted by six U.S. states
and is in use in the Netherlands, Hong Kong, and Canada, and providers across
the country. We talked with three users of this planning tool to highlight the
different, yet valuable uses of SIS assessments in providing person-centered
services and supports to people with intellectual disabilities. The result is
an article titled
"What's in a SIS Score: User Experiences of the
Supports Intensity Scale" published in the second issue of the SIS Vantage newsletter.
The
SIS Vantage is a free, quarterly newsletter on the Supports
Intensity Scale.
Sign up at
http://www.responsetrack.net/aamr/sis/sign_up. To read past issues
of the SIS Vantage visit
http://www.siswebsite.org/page.ww?name=Past+Issues§ion=Newsletters
The Supports Intensity Scale is published by the American Association on Mental
Retardation. If you would like to tell your constituents about the Supports Intensity
Scale, download a free article on SIS
here.
RESEARCHERS DISCOVER ONE GENE CONTRIBUTING SIGNIFICANTLY TO MENTAL RETARDATION
IN PERSONS WITH DOWN SYNDROME
Researchers at Stanford University have discovered that one specific gene on
the chromosome responsible for Down Syndrome is responsible for the cognitive
impairment that results from having the Syndrome. This discovery allows for possible
treatments to focus on that specific gene rather than the entire chromosome.
Down syndrome is caused by an extra copy of chromosome 21, giving persons born
with it a total of three such chromosomes. Down syndrome is a major cause of
mental retardation.
Read a press release on the discovery from Stanford University at
http://news-service.stanford.edu/news/2006/july12/med-downsynd-071206.html
To read an article on this discovery published in
Neuron, visit
http://www.neuron.org/content/article/fulltext?uid=PIIS0896627306004144
ONLY FIVE U.S.STATES SCREEN NEWBORNS FOR ALL THE 29 CORE DISORDERS RECOMMENDED;
OVERALL NUMBER OF BABIES SCREENED HAS NEARLY DOUBLED IN THE PAST YEAR
While the number of newborn babies receiving screening tests has nearly doubled
in the past year in the United States, only five states including Iowa, Maryland,
Mississippi, New Jersey, and Virginia administer all of the 29 tests recommended.
This means that only 9 percent of all newborns are screened for all of the conditions
and more than four million babies born this year will not be screened for all
treatable disorders, says the latest March of Dimes Newborn Screening Report
Card.
Read the report at
http://www.marchofdimes.com/aboutus/15796_20475.asp
PROFESSOR OF SOCIAL WORK AND NOTED DISABILITY RESEARCHER, DR. SUSAN PARISH TALKS
TO AAMR F.Y.I.
Researcher, professor, and social worker, Dr. Susan Parish is Assistant Professor
of Social Work at the University of North Carolina and also a member of the American
Association on Mental Retardation. Dr. Parish talks to
AAMR F.Y.I. about the
long-term care crisis in America and how social workers are uniquely poised to
help the developmental disability community.
Read the interview at
http://www.aamr.org/FYI/interview_Parish.shtml
IN UTERO EXPOSURE TO DDT CAUSES DEVELOPMENTAL DELAY, NEW RESEARCH SHOWS
A federally-funded research project by the University of California, Berkeley
scientists involving the children of women who recently emigrated from Mexico
to California’s Salinas Valley shows that the pesticide DDT does serious
harm to the human brain. The study, led by Brenda Eskenazi of the UC Berkley
School of Public Health measured blood levels of DDT and one of its breakdown
products, DDE, in 360 pregnant women. For each tenfold increase in DDT levels
measured in the mother, the team found a corresponding two-to three-point decrease
in the children's mental development scores at 12 and 24 months. The highest
in utero DDT exposures in children were associated with a seven-to 10-point decrease
in Bayley Scales of Infant Development mental scores, compared to the lowest
exposures. Bayley is a well-known method for developmental assessment of young
children.
Read a press release on the discovery at
http://www.berkeley.edu/news/media/releases/2006/07/05_ddt.shtml
To read an abstract on the study published in the July 2006 issue of
Pediatrics,
visit
http://pediatrics.aappublications.org/cgi/content/abstract/118/1/233
AAMR F.Y.I. is compiled by Anna Prabhala, Editor. Please submit comments, suggestions,
tips, and news to
annap@aamr.org
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Access past issues of AAMR F.Y.I. at
www.aamr.org/FYI/
© Copyright 2006 American Association on Mental Retardation
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