To say the least, Kendra's life did not turn out the way she had hoped. She was scarcely able to muster the capacity to reflect on herself and her situation and did her best not to think about it too much. Over the last few years, she had almost withered away, appearing as a shadow of her former self. Her face was sunken, and the dark circles under her eyes had become permanent. In rare moments of lucidity, Kendra brought to mind her mother and father who she hadn't seen for years. One part of her whispered to them how sorry she was, and another part of her raged at them for setting her life on the course they had. On one level, she knew that they both did the best they could with what they had, but on another level, she could never forgive them.
Thankfully such moments were rare for Kendra as they were quickly overtaken by more of the drug, more of the buzz. She got to the point where she continued to need more of it to dull the pain.
It must have been this desire that pushed her over the edge. She injected once and then again --- and then there was a blinding light followed by nothing but darkness.
Police found her body outside on a very cold December night. There was no one there for her, no one to claim her as their own.
1) What are the provisions made for deaths for which there is no next of kin or family? Who provides burial services, and who pays for these services?
2) How many people die each day in the U.S. who have no living relatives?
Thursday, June 28, 2012
Monday, June 25, 2012
Week Ten
At age 50, Kendra looks like someone much older. She has been in and out of any number of treatment facilities and counseling centers, and none have succeeded in helping her kick her drug habit. Now, she lives in a small, two room house and spends her time shooting up while wondering where the next dollar will come from for food and more heroin. She permanently lost parental rights to her son when he was just 6 years old, and she really doesn't know where he is. Underneath all of her drug use is this incredible pain that she has lived with all these years.
Kendra shares the house with a man who shares her habit. He does little except help her to get more drugs, and the two spend most of their days high in front of the TV. On occasion, she has even taken to prostituting herself in order to get money to buy more drugs. Her life is one big spiral of despair.
1) Assuming that Kendra has been identified as having a disability, how much assistance (in dollars per month) is she likely to receive in the way of SSI? How about food stamps?
2) What is the prognosis for Kendra given that she is addicted to heroin? How likely is it that she will be able to "get clean?"
3) In thinking about Kendra, consider her life up to this point. Whose "fault" is it that she is in the state she is in? Is there an individual to "blame," or are the causal factors more complex?
Kendra shares the house with a man who shares her habit. He does little except help her to get more drugs, and the two spend most of their days high in front of the TV. On occasion, she has even taken to prostituting herself in order to get money to buy more drugs. Her life is one big spiral of despair.
1) Assuming that Kendra has been identified as having a disability, how much assistance (in dollars per month) is she likely to receive in the way of SSI? How about food stamps?
2) What is the prognosis for Kendra given that she is addicted to heroin? How likely is it that she will be able to "get clean?"
3) In thinking about Kendra, consider her life up to this point. Whose "fault" is it that she is in the state she is in? Is there an individual to "blame," or are the causal factors more complex?
Thursday, June 21, 2012
Week Nine
Kendra has continually struggled
with making interpersonal relationships with her life as her regular outbreaks
usually scare away other students. Also
since Kendra started using drugs she tends to steal from the people closest to
her in order to get the money to get the drugs and get high. No matter how many times the police or her
mom has caught her, she continues to buy weed.
She says that the weed calms her down and allows her to function in her
broken home.
Kendra’s mom is looking for her
to enter a rehabilitation center since she thinks Kendra is addicted to
pot. Kendra’s mom is very fearful that
her daughter’s drug use will escalate into more harmful drugs that will put
Kendra’s life in danger along with other people’s lives in danger by the decisions
that Kendra makes while she is high. But
Kendra wants none of the help that her mother is giving her since she feels
that Esther just wants to get rid of her so she decided to move back with her
father and drop out of school with only a year left.
A few years have passed by and
Kendra is now 21 facing financial problems as she cannot hold a job for longer
than 2 months at a time. This leaves her
without any health benefits and little money since she only received minimum
wage at the jobs she has worked. She
cannot rely on her father because he has problems with alcohol and he only
feeds constantly into her drug problem and has started drinking herself. Her mom used to send her money every week to
help Kendra get by but Esther has stopped that seeing that money was not being
put to good use. Kendra is going to
apply for welfare in order for her to be able to buy food for herself and some
clothes when she needs them.
Kendra’s 25th birthday
is coming up and she realizes that she has only a couple of friends to surround
her to celebrate in which they just use her to get to drugs easier but this
only bothers her for a little while before she starts going back to her old
ways.
Kendra is now thirty-two years of
age. She has been through a lot in her twenties. After spending more and more
time with her “new” group of friends Kendra got into a little too much trouble
with the police and spent seven years in prison. Prison was hard, very hard for
Kendra. She got into many fights and confrontations with inmates.
After serving her time she was
released on probation. Kendra was very severely underweight as she did not eat
the prison food and the drug use has eaten up her body. Sadly, Kendra did not learn any lessons from
jail time and quickly got back into doing drugs just about 6 months after she
was released. In addition to being high and under the influence almost daily,
Kendra got pregnant. She currently has a three-year-old son. She currently does
not have custody of her little boy due to her lack of being able to provide for
him. Child services have put him into a
foster home for the time being.
Kendra has had many ups and downs
since high school and has tried to straighten up. However, she always finds
herself in trouble. She fears that she
will never see her son again and wants to get help as the years keep passing
by. She hopes that she can regain
strength for her family to accept her back and raise her child in the Jewish
faith as she was. Kendra feels that she
has lost herself between her episodes and drug use.
1) What are typical milestones of a woman with Bipolar
disorder in early adulthood?
2) What are the steps that Kendra has to do to get her son
back?
3) What is the likely hood that Kendra’s child will have a
mental disability or disorder? Provide evidence of how genetics play a role in
mental health disorders.
4) Explain the effects that drug
use has on the body in an average person and the effects it has on someone
living with a mental disorder.
5) What are a few short term goals
that will help Kendra stop using drugs? What are some long term goals that she
could keep in mind?
Friday, June 15, 2012
Week Eight
Kendra's life continued to fluctuate between somewhat stable and incredibly chaotic. At age 17, Kendra was looking at the inside of a detention cell. She thought back to how she got here, and a lot of it seemed to be a blur. There was the theft of a pair of shoes that got her community service and lots of therapy with that annoying woman that she tried to play - but the therapist was on to Kendra's games and didn't let her get away with her usual tricks. Annoying, but maybe a little helpful even if help was the last thing Kendra would admit to experiencing.
Then there was the fight at school - even thought Kendra was in classes for students with emotional/behavioral disorders, there were plenty of opportunities for her to get into trouble. When she was 15, somebody looked at her the wrong way, and she jumped on the student and started punching the student in the head. Luckily, two PE teachers were rounding the corner and were able to break up the fight. This, however, led to a manifestation determination hearing and, subsequently, placement at a "special" day school.
Kendra did OK at the school, but she was running the streets at night as her mother lost any degree of management and relationship that she might have had with Kendra at one point. It was just after her 17th birthday that she found her way into a heap of trouble with a group of so-called friends who provided the opportunity for her to get high. She was caught bringing drugs to school, and the local police were called.
1) What is a manifestation determination hearing? When is it used?
2) What do you think is the nature of Kendra's disability?
3) What are typical developmental milestones for a 17 year old young woman?
4) What are the outcomes for children involved in the juvenile justice system in Virginia? Provide statistical data.
Then there was the fight at school - even thought Kendra was in classes for students with emotional/behavioral disorders, there were plenty of opportunities for her to get into trouble. When she was 15, somebody looked at her the wrong way, and she jumped on the student and started punching the student in the head. Luckily, two PE teachers were rounding the corner and were able to break up the fight. This, however, led to a manifestation determination hearing and, subsequently, placement at a "special" day school.
Kendra did OK at the school, but she was running the streets at night as her mother lost any degree of management and relationship that she might have had with Kendra at one point. It was just after her 17th birthday that she found her way into a heap of trouble with a group of so-called friends who provided the opportunity for her to get high. She was caught bringing drugs to school, and the local police were called.
1) What is a manifestation determination hearing? When is it used?
2) What do you think is the nature of Kendra's disability?
3) What are typical developmental milestones for a 17 year old young woman?
4) What are the outcomes for children involved in the juvenile justice system in Virginia? Provide statistical data.
Monday, June 11, 2012
Week Seven
Now at age 12, Kendra had been through quite a bit. When she was 9 years of age, she couldn't take all of the chaos and fighting and uncertainty. Kendra tried to reach out, but, at age 9, no one really listened to her or took her seriously. Kendra cut herself terribly in an attempt at suicide.
Kendra was taken to the hospital and, after the initial injuries healed, placed at a children's residential facility for ongoing mental health treatment. Here she stayed for 9 months. Her mother participated in some "family" sessions over the phone and occasionally in person.
When Kendra was released, she returned to Philadelphia to live with her mother. The next two years were a mix of outpatient therapy, in-home therapy, "alternative" therapies, all to little avail. Now at age 12, Kendra was as unhappy as ever. She thought about going to live with her dad, but she knew that his drinking had only gotten worse since the divorce.
Kendra had few friends in Philadelphia, although there happened to be a girl who she met at the residential placement whose family lived nearby. She occasionally got together with this person, one of her only friends. They sometimes didn't seem to have much to say, and other times they couldn't stop talking the whole time they were together.
1) What residential facilities are typically available for children, and who pays for a child to attend? What kind of mental health treatment was Kendra likely to have received?
2) What kinds of follow-up treatment are typical when a child has been in a residential facility?
3) Assuming that Kendra was treated for depression and possibly other kinds of mood difficulties, describe the outcomes associated with residential treatment for children given the diagnosis of depression. How much improvement typically occurs? On what factors does this depend? What is the rate of return to residential facilities? On what factors does that depend?
4) What are the typical developmental milestones for a 12 year old girl? In what ways is Kendra atypical as far as you can tell?
Kendra was taken to the hospital and, after the initial injuries healed, placed at a children's residential facility for ongoing mental health treatment. Here she stayed for 9 months. Her mother participated in some "family" sessions over the phone and occasionally in person.
When Kendra was released, she returned to Philadelphia to live with her mother. The next two years were a mix of outpatient therapy, in-home therapy, "alternative" therapies, all to little avail. Now at age 12, Kendra was as unhappy as ever. She thought about going to live with her dad, but she knew that his drinking had only gotten worse since the divorce.
Kendra had few friends in Philadelphia, although there happened to be a girl who she met at the residential placement whose family lived nearby. She occasionally got together with this person, one of her only friends. They sometimes didn't seem to have much to say, and other times they couldn't stop talking the whole time they were together.
1) What residential facilities are typically available for children, and who pays for a child to attend? What kind of mental health treatment was Kendra likely to have received?
2) What kinds of follow-up treatment are typical when a child has been in a residential facility?
3) Assuming that Kendra was treated for depression and possibly other kinds of mood difficulties, describe the outcomes associated with residential treatment for children given the diagnosis of depression. How much improvement typically occurs? On what factors does this depend? What is the rate of return to residential facilities? On what factors does that depend?
4) What are the typical developmental milestones for a 12 year old girl? In what ways is Kendra atypical as far as you can tell?
Thursday, June 7, 2012
Week Five/Six
Esther
has finally moved out. She got the job at the museum, but only for part –time
employment. Esther took Kendra and Marsha to Philadelphia to l live with her
sister. Esther and the kids have only
been there two weeks and they are over-taking Esther’s sister’s house. There is
barely enough room for all of them to eat at the same time. The sister has made
it very clear that Esther can only stay three months until she finds a
full-time job and support herself and the kids alone.
Art
on the other hand is furious! He knows exactly where Esther and the kids have
gone but he has decided to wait to act legally until his large contract is
finished. He never calls or emails Esther and the kids. The kids even believe
that Art doesn’t love them at all.
In
addition, Art’s company has just gotten sued and is on the verge of shutting
down only causing more financial problems and stress for the family.
Since
Kendra moved to Philadelphia, things have only gone downhill. Often she hears her mom and dad fighting on
the phone when they do talk and her parents plan on getting divorced. Now this means a long custody battle that she
is going have to go through. Kendra
seems depressed by withdrawing from activities in school and at home. But the simplest things still agitate her,
where she kicks, bites, and screams when she is angry or anxious all the
time. She hasn’t received much therapy
because of the changes going on and feels neglected.
Her
doctor and psychiatrist don’t want to directly diagnose her with bipolar disorder
just yet as she is still young where she would have to take medications. They have told her mother that she has child
attachment disorder which likely stemmed from the fighting that occurred at
home between her mother and father all the time. She also displayed symptoms like not smiling
and rejects any attention her mother tries to give her to calm her down. Esther thinks that her job at the museum is
taking away even more valuable time from caring for Kendra but it’s her only
option right now to be able to support the family as the moved down the street
into a small apartment from her sister.
Her
lack of interest in school doesn’t have too much effect on her as she does
average for her grade level but her mother thinks that the school can do more
for her as Esther believes school is the best option for Kendra to get help. She has progressed normally to each grade as
she is currently in 3rd grade now but has only 1 friend and teachers
often don’t want her in class because she is very disruptive. Third grade has proven to be very difficult
for her as her social and emotional problems have taken over her life and her
mother fears that she won’t pass the 3rd grade.
11) Is it too late for the school to develop
an IEP for Kendra? Develop some goals and objectives that would most likely be
on her IEP.
22) What help should Kendra be receiving for
child attachment disorder? If she were to receive the correct help what would
be the outcome of it?
33) What are common problems that usually
result from divorce and custody battles?
How will this affect Kendra?
44) Would it be beneficial for Kendra to be
put in special education classes? Why or why not?
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