I’m very sorry. It is the hardest road I ever traveled. |
Residential programs can be part of an IEP and if the district will pay, that is likely easier than getting Medicaid to cover a child. But it probably involves struggling through everything the district provides in-house plus private day school. |
Figure out how your child can get into Medicaid. It’s an easier enrollment criteria than for adults, but varies widely by state. Parental income will not necessarily limit you.
Some states have plenty of facilities for children mental health treatment. Without knowing your residency it’s hard to give advice. |
We're in Maryland |
Op—what grade is your child in? Is he in a discrete program or gen ed? |
3rd. In gen ed, for now, but things are slowly moving there. Probably to a learning center. |
Have you checked out boys town residential care as an option? (Their main campus is nebraska) |
I haven't. But to be clear, we're absolutely not in a position to self-pay. |
It's a non-profit and is not self-pay |
OP, are you looking for a mental/behavioral health treatment facility or a residential school placement for kids with developmental disabilities? It seems that most of these responses are for the first, but your description of your DS seems like you are looking for the second.
Sheppard Pratt has a neuro behavioral short term stabilization unit for kids with ASD: https://www.sheppardpratt.org/care-finder/child-amp-adolescent-neuropsychiatric-unit/ Kids often go from there to another placement. There are residential schools for kids with higher need developmental disabilities: https://mansef.org/ These are more special education focused as opposed to psychotherapy. |
Yes, residential school placement. That's exactly what I've been looking for. Thank you. |
If he’s struggling in school and you “don’t know what more the school could do”, why hasn’t the placement changed to a self-contained classroom? |
You know it doesn't work like that, don't you? It's very hard to get other placements. |
LOL! Kids sit on waiting lists for months and years trying to get a seat in a private special ed school. Self-contained classrooms are full. Everything is full. |