Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A friend paid $25K for Linda Mood Bell in one year. I almost fainted.
OP here again. Ha! I am looking into the vision therapy because it was recommended after neuropsych testing. Guess what other program was recommended for my kid? Lindamood Bell! I am not rich enough to parent this kid. We are truly going broke trying to do everything. Vacations are gone and so are house improvements.
Anonymous wrote:As the parent of a teenager on the autism spectrum, I’ve seen a lot of snake oil salesmen over the years. You need to be very careful as the parent of a SN child, because many therapists will see you as a cash cow. Carefully weigh the cost/benefit of any recommended service (PT, OT, ST, social skills groups, psychologists and psychiatrists) and regularly evaluate the results of any treatment plan. Don’t be afraid to say No or stop services. There are less expensive options if you look for them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As the parent of a teenager on the autism spectrum, I’ve seen a lot of snake oil salesmen over the years. You need to be very careful as the parent of a SN child, because many therapists will see you as a cash cow. Carefully weigh the cost/benefit of any recommended service (PT, OT, ST, social skills groups, psychologists and psychiatrists) and regularly evaluate the results of any treatment plan. Don’t be afraid to say No or stop services. There are less expensive options if you look for them.
PP continued. For example, I saw that the expensive OT was doing very little to help with handwriting, so I ordered pencil grips online and some “fun” handwriting books. Also, we started coloring together and voila, his fine motor skills improved. The 1:1 psychology appointments weren’t helping, so we signed up for cheaper social skills groups. Also, if a sports team or activity doesn’t work, find another. Same with schools. It’s hard sometimes, but you really have to develop a thick skin to help your child.
Anonymous wrote:As the parent of a teenager on the autism spectrum, I’ve seen a lot of snake oil salesmen over the years. You need to be very careful as the parent of a SN child, because many therapists will see you as a cash cow. Carefully weigh the cost/benefit of any recommended service (PT, OT, ST, social skills groups, psychologists and psychiatrists) and regularly evaluate the results of any treatment plan. Don’t be afraid to say No or stop services. There are less expensive options if you look for them.
Anonymous wrote:A friend paid $25K for Linda Mood Bell in one year. I almost fainted.
Anonymous wrote:SO there have been a few threads on vision therapy recently and I contributed to some of them. We just got some testing results back and the psychologist is recommending vision therapy. It makes sense--my kid had strabismus and he has dyslexia too. I would be willing to try it despite lack of research because I've heard enough anecdotal reports that I think it may help my kid.
SO I called VCDC which was recommended by my kid's psychologist. Guess what they charge? $997 for a set of three appointments for the intake and then $3340 for a set of 12 appointments with a "therapist" who has a certificate. That works out to $278 for an hour long session. Those are psychiatrist prices for a person with a bachelor's degree and some training. The receptionist could not explain how they could justify those prices.
If you have done vision therapy did you pay that much?
My daughter has dyslexia too, and her school is expensive, her tutor is expensive, you name it, everything about this process is $$$$$$$$$!!!!