Family 'scared' as boy with severe autism faces release without home supports
Carly Sutherland and her husband John Sutherland address a
news conference at the legislature in Halifax on Thursday, Nov. 30,
2017. The Sutherland's nine-year-old son Callum is severely impacted by
autism and they are having a hard time having his needs met with no
outpatient care available. (ANDREW VAUGHAN CP)
A Halifax-area mother issued an emotional plea for help Thursday for
her family and for her nine-year-old son, who is due to be released next
week from a confined hospital unit but suffers from violently
aggressive fits of frustration because of his severe autism.
“Our Callum is a nine-year-old little boy and he’s scared — we’re
scared,” Carly Sutherland told reporters during a news conference at the
Nova Scotia legislature.
IN HIS MOTHER'S OWN WORDS: My autistic boy has nowhere to go for help
“We need help and we are at the point where I am sitting in front of
strangers begging you to share our story,” she said through sobs as she
was supported by her husband John.
Sutherland said her family is living a “nightmare,” because there are no proper supports or treatment for Callum.
Sutherland said her son was admitted to the IWK Children’s Hospital
Oct. 19, and remains confined to an isolated unit for safety reasons
because there is no appropriate therapy available. She said Callum is
far too violent to participate in the unit’s school or recreational
therapy, and isn’t verbal enough to access counselling services.
Sutherland said her son, whom she described as “an awesome little guy,”
began losing his limited communication skills over the past year to the
point where they “dropped off a cliff.”
“His only means of expressing his constant frustration was to lash out
with extreme aggression. I was covered in abrasions from bites and was
concussed from being head butted. On bad days there could be over 100
incidents of violence before breakfast.”
Sutherland said she and her husband interpreted Callum’s aggression as a “desperate cry for help.”
Testing showed no underlying physical cause for her son’s behaviour,
Sutherland said. She said the family ended up hiring behavioural
interventionists “at great expense” because Nova Scotia doesn’t cover
such services for anyone over the age of 6.
She said she agrees with hospital staff that the best way to deal with
Callum’s complex needs is on an outpatient basis, but said the “joke” is
that no public outpatient services exist.
The Sutherlands said they are asking the province for three things:
- to ensure their family and others have access to necessary resources to maintain the safety of their home;
- coordination between the departments of community services, health,
and education to develop a shared plan of support for children like
Callum;
- to continue publicly funded, evidence-based interventions past the age of six.
“I call on the government of Nova Scotia to right the egregious wrong
that is our treatment of children with autism in crisis and their
families. Our family and the families who have faced this before us …
need appropriate crisis intervention services,” Sutherland said.
Vicki Harvey, community outreach coordinator with Autism Nova Scotia,
said the Sutherlands’ story is not an isolated case. Although she
couldn’t provide statistics, Harvey said her organization has seen a
“drastic increase” in calls from families and individuals dealing with
similar problems.
“There is nothing to offer them,” said Harvey. “So we need the
government to come together to work with … autism experts to come up
with ways to provide supports and systems to the community.”
Progressive Conservative Leader Jamie Baillie, whose party organized
Thursday’s media event, said families like the Sutherlands shouldn’t
have to call a press conference to get their children help.
“We shouldn’t be here trying to shame a government into doing the right thing,” said Baillie.
Carly Sutherland said the stress of her family’s situation has left her feeling like a failure.
“I have a masters degree in special education, I work with vulnerable
children for a living, I have non-violent crisis intervention training —
yet I can no longer manage my own precious child,” she said.
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