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Press Release – Children with an intellectual disability or an autism spectrum disorder

QUÉBEC CITY, CANADA, March 24, 2015 /CNW Telbec/ – Today the Québec Ombudsman released an investigation report on its findings and recommendations concerning the health services and social services provided to children with an intellectual disability or an autism spectrum disorder. In the Québec Ombudsman’s opinion, these children must have access to the required services in response to their needs, without being hampered by rigid rules based on the kind of impairment.

The report therefore covers access to rehabilitation services and service continuity and dovetailing between health and social services centres (CSSSs), rehabilitation centres for physical disabilities (CRDPs) and rehabilitation centres for intellectual disabilities and pervasive developmental disorders (CRDITEDs).

Main findings of the investigation by the Québec Ombudsman:

Starting next week, the health and social services network will undergo major changes, in particular, regional mergers of many institutions. The Québec Ombudsman sees this as an opportunity to improve the fit between the various services offered to children with disabilities.

The Québec Ombudsman’s recommendations to the Ministère de la Santé et des Services sociaux

  1. To foster service coordination: Designate a front-line navigator (pivotal resource) as soon as a child enters the system and produce an individualized service plan whenever services are required from several providers;
  2. To aim for greater fairness: Have a standard reference date (system entry date) for fair positioning of a child on a waiting list at any point in his or her care pathway;
  3. To develop truly integrated services: Better define the service offering, service pathways, operational practices and models for partnership between service programs;
  4. To optimize resources: Examine the usefulness of grouping and pooling the resources of the two disability service programs (physical disability program and intellectual disability and autism spectrum disorder program).

Ombudsperson Raymonde Saint-Germain believes that “at a key stage in the development of children with disabilities, continuous access to services is a pressing matter. The Québec Ombudsman’s recommendations are realistic and are aimed at this critical goal. Reform of the health and social services network is the right context for implementing the recommendations. Above and beyond administrative merging of institutions, the primary concern must be genuine service integration for these children’s benefit.” The Ministère de la Santé et des Services sociaux accepted the recommendations.

See: Investigation report by the Québec Ombudsman.

Source: CNW website: Children with an intellectual disability or an autism spectrum disorder – Better integrated services in response to children’s needs

 

 

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