The Association for Adults with Autism Philippines (AAAP) will hold
an educational seminar on diagnostic, treatment, and policy issues affecting
adults with autism.
The seminar will be held on Saturday, October
13, 2012, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the Justitia Room, 4/F, Ateneo Law School,
Rockwell Center, Makati City.
An all-Filipino panel of specialists based in
Manila and the US are the featured speakers:
·
Autism Spectrum
Disorders: Criteria and Causes. Speaker: Lirio Sobrevinas Covey, Ph.D., Professor of Clinical
Psychology in Psychiatry, Columbia University Medical Center, New
York
·
Philippine laws on
the rights of persons with disabilities. Speaker: Atty. Nina Patricia Sison-Arroyo, Assistant Director, Ateneo
Legal Services Center, Ateneo De Manila University
·
Medical and
pharmacological interventions for persons with autism. Speaker: Christine Leonor Ma. C. Conducto,
M.D., DPPS, Fellow, Philippine Society for Developmental and Behavioral
Pediatrics
·
A comprehensive
framework for understanding autism and the families with autism. Speaker: Ma. Lourdes “Honey” Carandang,
Ph.D., President, Metropolitan Psychological Corporation
·
Enhancing
creativity among persons with disabilities. Speaker: Erlinda F. Camara, Ph.D. University of the
Philippines
·
Residential
community living for adults with autism: the Life-sharing Model. Speaker: Ronald Sanchez, M.A., Director,
Camphill Community, Santa Cruz, California
Autism is among the most prevalent conditions
recognized during childhood. It has been estimated that there are close to 1
million Filipinos with autism. Caring for a child with autism is considered one
of the most difficult of parental challenges. An additional challenge is that
autism is a life-long condition. About a third of persons who meet the clinical
diagnosis of autism may be able to lead independent lives as adults, but the
greater majority will be dependent on caregivers to meet their daily needs
throughout their lives.
There are few resources in the Philippines
for persons with autism, even children and virtually none for Filipino adults
with autism. As persons with autism approach adulthood, their family members
begin to ask themselves the anguished question - Who will take care of my
child when I am no longer able to?
Meeting this need is the mission of AAAP - to
draw attention to the needs of adults with autism, to improve the quality of
their lives, and to provide a safe, comfortable, productive, and long-term
context for them, in the company of their peers.
The seminar is the first in a series of
educational and training programs designed to build capacity for meeting the
wide breadth of caregiving issues concerning adults with autism. Donations and
proceeds from the seminar will go to the construction fund for the first
residential community for Filipino adults with autism to be named “A
Special Place”.
Further information about the seminar, AAAP,
and A Special Place can be obtained at http://adultautismphil.wordpress.com. Inquiries
may also be directed to AAAP officers at adults_with_ autism@yahoogroups.com.

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