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Untrained Staff: My Phlebotomy Experience at Cohen Children's

For years, I have taken my daughter Talia, who has autism, to Cohen Children's for lab work. There is a very nice lady there, Barbara who is very sweet and helpful. Soon after I arrived, she would ask me if I want a child life specialist to entertain Talia, would apply Talia's Emla cream on her forearm where she has a good vein, a topical prescription anesthetic and was very good with Talia. Unfortunately, this year on June 28th, she was not there. There were two other women.

I came in with Talia, now 17 years old, 5 foot 5 and 121 pounds, hooked up to her service dog Cecil and she was listening to Disney on an ipad. I asked one of the women for a child life specialist. She got busy with other matters and I did not see her for a while so I asked the other woman if she called the child life specialist. She told me that I never requested it. I told her I had Emla cream. Without checking where Talia's vein was she told me to apply the Emla cream myself in four areas. I told her Talia will lick it off and that I checked for a good vein so I just want to apply it to that one area, and she said that was fine. Next, I had to ask her for a glove to apply it, which she gave me. The child life specialist arrived. We went to the phlebotomy room and the other woman warned me that if I can't get Talia to sit, she will not draw her blood because it is unsafe. I assured her that I lift weights and I can hold her. Then she warned me again that she would not draw her blood if she won't sit because it is unsafe. I reassured her again that I will get Talia to sit down. I did get Talia to sit on my lap and while the child life specialist entertained her, we got all the labs drawn as I knew we could.

By the way if you are ever thinking of contacting patient relations at Cohen Children's don't waste your time. I left a message July 1st and I am still waiting to be called back. So much for corporate medicine!

SPECIAL NEEDS: NO CAMERAS = ABUSE

Here is another article showing how New York State polices are a breeding ground for abuse for individuals with disabilities. This shows how abuse festers for years due to low wage, poorly trained and supervised workers and understaffing. Instead of condemning the Judge Rotenberg Center, people need to learn from them- their 24/7 video recording, applied behavior analysis training and supervision and staff retention procedures as well as releasing individuals from chemical prisons due to overmedication as an unethical substitute for applied behavior analysis. Video monitoring is the voice for the disabled who can't speak!

Residents Cowered While Workers at a Group Home Smacked and Pushed Them

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/06/09/nyregion/new-york-group-home-abuse.html

Nature, Good Health and Wellbeing

According to a new study, "Spending at Least 120 Minutes a Week in Nature is Associated with Good Health and Wellbeing," (https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-019-44097-3) spending at least 120 minutes a week with recreational nature improved health and well-being according to the study of 19,806 subjects. It did not matter how if the time spent was continuous or separated. This study included among others, elderly and individuals with health problems. Nature can be wonderful therapy.

Another Study Confirms Link Between Diabetes in Pregnancy and Autism: Stop Blaming Vaccines

This study examined the relationship between Hemoglobin A1C levels, a measurement of overall blood sugar, and autism in offspring. Diabetes prevalence is skyrocketing. We need to focus on diet, exercise, environmental toxins such as air pollution, BPA and pesticides, as discussed in previous posts, and stop blaming vaccines.

https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/fullarticle/2735977?guestAccessKey=296dad1d-0424-410f-aa63-24abd7eece4e&utm_source=silverchair&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=article_alert-jama&utm_term=mostread&utm_content=olf-widget_06122019