I am a therapist from the Philippines and currently working with a 3 yr old CP spastic 
Quadriplegia. I am worrying about his development because I have been treating him for 
1 1/2 years already and still find very little improvement regarding his motor 
develoment. I used NDT for the first 6 months incorporated with facilitatory 
techniques for his hypotonic lower extremities and very spastic upper extremities. 
From the sixth month up to present I am using therapeutic electrical stimulation to 
relax his muscles and develop strength. During every treatment I incorporate play to 
facilitate his communication and still uses NDT once in a while. I have also used 
icing/ cold stimulaiton as well as use techniques of sensory integration. I am very 
open to every treatment technique so that I would achieve my goal for him. He has 
frequent seizures, breathing problem (barrel chested) hip subluxation, has an NGT for 
almost 2 years, has very limited voluntary movements, his ATNR and primit!
ive
 reflexes persists, and still does not developed equilibrium reactions and righting 
reactions while placed in sitting position and demonstrated very little improvement 
with all the techniques and modalities I used and now I noticed he has structural 
scoliosis. I'd like to know if i CAN STILL EXPECT SOME IMPROVEMENTS IN THE NEXT COUPLE 
OF MONTHS.What do you think will be his prognosis? What do you think would be the most 
effective treatment for him? Please give me some practical suggestions regarding the 
best therapeutic technique I can do. As a therapist I aim to provide my patients the 
best treatment possible to make their little lives wothwhile and I always try to find 
the best solution for every problem. PLEASE HELP ME!!!!

Norileen J. Rosales, OTRP
Private Practice 
--

On Sun, 23 Feb 2003 08:24:44  
 Elizabeth H. Thiers wrote:
>Where are you located Rick?   I know several sources in our area and since
>many are federally funded you may find a correlate in your area.  For young
>children who are blind with physical impairments there is CITE and the local
>Lion's club center.  For others there is the Florida Division of the blind.
>Orientation and Mobility is a specialty area of vision teachers and requires
>advanced training.  However, at least the resources in our area are great
>about sharing their wealth of information.  I know when I started working
>with some deaf/ blind clients they gave me oodles of information.
>Also, you may already know this already but, get a good idea of difference
>between blind and visually impaired.  You want to know what type of sight
>the person may or may not have.
>
>Elizabeth H. Thiers, OTR/L
>Florida Elks Children's Therapy Services
>[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
>
>  -----Original Message-----
>  From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of
>[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>  Sent: Saturday, February 22, 2003 1:10 PM
>  To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>  Subject: ADLs and blindness
>
>
>  Rickot-
>  The independent people I know with blindness have everything in their
>house very organized.  They always keep things in the same spot.  If they
>know braille, they use a labeler to label everything with braille writing.
>A professor I had really used his ears for everything!  He could walk
>through a city and know when to  cross the street by just listening to the
>sounds of the cars.  I have never worked with training the blind myself,
>this is just what I have seen with the blind people I know.  There are blind
>rehab centers around which are residential programs for training the blind.
>That is all the help I can offer.
>


Need a new email address that people can remember
Check out the new EudoraMail at
http://www.eudoramail.com

*********��***********

Unsubscribe? Send a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

In the message's *body*, put the following text: unsubscribe OTlist

** List messages are archived at:

http://www.mail-archive.com/[EMAIL PROTECTED]

*********��***********

Reply via email to