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Kids With Special Needs and Disabilities
Reply to "FCPS HS with new panic attacks"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Does your child have specific fears? Is the panic because of the medical issues? Are there things you can do to alleviate the concerns? [/quote] That’s the opposite of how anxiety and panic should be treated. OP needs an anxiety expert asap. [/quote] Are you smoking crack. That PP asked questions, they didn’t suggest an intervention. Idiot.[/quote] PP suggested “alleviating concerns” which is the opposite of what should be happening. Anxiety is irrational so “alleviating concerns” only feeds it. [/quote] You not just an idiot you’re a clueless idiot.[/quote] Um ok … I am actually a person who has been extensively treated for anxiety using evidence based methods. The key to every evidence based method for addressing anxiety and panic is to learn to tolerate the anxious feelings rather than avoiding or accomodating them. Do you have a different evidence based method? [/quote] I am the PP that you trashed. I have a child who experienced such debilitating anxiety that he eventually got moved out of mainstream. I am well versed in both anxiety treatment and also in school related issues and how schools will handle things. My questions about cause and suggestion of alleviating concerns are both right on target. Before you can work on the anxiety piece you need to make sure the school is a safe as it can be space for the student. In order to do that you need to identify specific concerns and fix what needs to be fixed. For example, if a kid is anxious because they are being beaten up on the bus, your first step isn’t to teach them to tolerate the idea that it may happen. You make the bus safe for them. If a kid is anxious about using the student bathrooms due to medical issues, you make different bathroom arrangements through the IEP or 504 process. In order to give OP insight into what schools do beyond a flash pass, I needed information. [/quote] My first step in fact would be able to get them to tolerate fears or not reinforcing their fears (conflict, bathroom accidents) while in parallel working on the practical issues. [/quote] You do realize that OP’s question is how to help them at school. And one of the ways to help at school is to identify those things that create anxiety and address those that can be eliminated. And OP has a senior who, if going to college, will need to hit the ground running as soon as school starts. Her child needs to get the stumbling blocks out of the way to the extent possible. It will be far worse for their mental health to be unable to go to college because they’re so busy trying to tolerate their fears that they can’t get the applications done. [/quote]
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