Finances, Costs and Gains
An article in the December Pediatrics examines the health care experiences of families with autistic children in the US. Researchers looked at a nationally representative 2005-06 survey of nearly 40,000 children with special health care needs; the children’s needs were “physical and mental,” and required medical care that was more than usual, yesterday’s Associated Press (via AZ Central) reports. 2,088 children of those children had autism.
The article is entitled A National Profile of the Health Care Experiences and Family Impact of Autism Spectrum Disorder Among Children in the United States, 2005–2006, by Michael D. Kogan, Bonnie B. Strickland, Stephen J. Blumberg, Gopal K. Singh, James M. Perrin, Peter C. van Dyck. The Associated Press notes that
Compared with parents whose youngsters have chronic health care needs but not autism, those with autistic children are three times more likely to have to quit their jobs or reduce work hours to care for their kids. They pay more for their kids’ health needs, spend more time providing or arranging for that care, and are more likely to have money difficulties, the study found.
Jacquie Mace, the mother of a 12-year-old autistic son, Austin, is quoted as saying that she spends “‘easily $15,000 to $20,000 out of pocket’” for her son; she’s still “working to pay off a $7,000 bill” for dental work for Austin, who required sedation and hospitalization as he is not able to sit in the dentist’s chair.
The topic of the “financial strain” on families to take care of an autistic child or relative is frequently noted, and perhaps even more in a time of economic uncertainty. A 2006 book, Understanding Autism: From Basic Neuroscience to Treatment by Michael Ganz, Adjunct Assistant Professor of Society, Human Development, and Health at the Harvard School of Public Health, estimated that it costs $32 million to take care of an autistic person over the course of her or his lifetime; some $29,000 plus for “direct medical costs, such as physician and outpatient services, prescription medication, and behavioral therapies” for an autistic person per year; some $38,000 to $43,000 for “direct non-medical costs, such as special education, camps, and child care” per year.
Those are big, and scary numbers. We’ve certainly spent a lot on Charlie’s education and medical needs. The dentist who Charlie’s grown familiar with is not covered by our insurance plan. When Charlie was younger, he did a lot of in-home ABA, verbal behavior, and speech therapy and we’ve always paid babysitters extra. And then there’s the lawyer, and more, and the reality that the jobs that Charlie will work at when he’s older are most likely not going to be high-paying.
And yet: If Charlie had not been autistic, I suspect there’d still have been plenty of “costs,” from childcare to camp to college to who knows what. According to 2007 USDA figures on Expeditures on Children by Families, families spend almost $300,000 from when a child is born to when he or she turns 17.
Talk about costs, while inevitable, can veer into talking about the “burden” of taking care of a disabled child, of a child who has “extra” needs and who may need care and support for much longer than a child who’s not disabled. While we’ve had our full share of difficult moments in trying to do our best by Charlie, taking care of him’s no burden. Sure we’ve had to give some things up, but the gains continue to outweigh any losses. We’ve gained much much more than we’ve ever spent, in dollars or in energy, in being Charlie’s parents—-life with Charlie is, simply, priceless.
Tags: asd, asperger, autism, autism blog developmental disabilities, costs, disabilities blog, disability, economics, finances, Insurance, Money, Work



5 opinions for Finances, Costs and Gains
Niksmom
Dec 1, 2008 at 9:19 am
I always get annoyed at those kinds of “scary” financial articles b/c they don’t usually include the average costs for children who are born prematurely or children who have cancer or…or… it’s always an incomplete and skewed accounting.
Nik’s care thus far in his five years of life has cost well over three million dollars; most of that was in the first year of life. None of that can be “blamed” on his autism. Yet, somehow, somewhere, I’m sure someone would find a way to do so to illustrate a flawed point.
ALL children cost money. Even for routine labor, delivery, well-child care, dental visits, the occasional tonsillectomy or broken bone…none of it is cheap these days.
I just chalk it up to the costs inherent in having a family. For me, the rewards far outweight the costs —both financially and emotionally.
Karin
Dec 1, 2008 at 11:29 am
I think they’re off by a factor of 10…. saying an average of $40k/year, for 70 years, that’s 2.8 million, plus the miscellaneous medical. I’d buy 3.2 million, but 32 million would be almost $500k/year - no one can spend that much, with or without insurance.
Linda
Dec 1, 2008 at 3:46 pm
Advocacy is needed now for housing and other supports for adults with autism.
Go Kristina!
autismville
Dec 1, 2008 at 4:12 pm
The Ganz study says $3.2 million, not $32 million.
Moi
Dec 2, 2008 at 2:59 pm
All of this is such a big DUH. Like we didn’t know this? They wasted all that grant money “finding this out” when they could have spent it getting help for the kids, developing a school program, etc.
I hate when people use the autistic community to give themselves a job.
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