Hi, Tess. Well, I don't know if you can assume that the injury is permanent as early as 9 days old. I would think it might take 1-2 months to really determine that, but I don't know. Please keep in mind though that "permanent" does not necessarily mean severe. I don't know if you saw this reply from "PeggyUBPN" on another thread, so I'll copy it here: "That was the same--finger movement only-- for my son, Joel (he's 21 months older than Emma). His function did return within a months time, however. He does have slight residual affects in supination and slight winging." -- there you have it, it took a month for Joel's function to return. Is his BPI severe? No, but it could be classified as permanent b/c as Peggy mentioned, he does have slight residual effects. So, even if you are looking at a permanent injury (which isn't a prognosis I think that a Pediatrician can make with certainty at this point), it could still be mild and have very little impact on Tess.
I'll tell you though what you have to be grateful for -- I think that most parents are given the opposite information. Since most BPIs spontaneously recover, most drs. initially downplay the injury to parents telling them it'll likely heal, most recover spontaneously, etc. Most drs. give new parents false hope and then they discover reality at some point. Most drs. don't seem to want to acknowledge the minority of BPIs that don't recover. We were given false hope and it wasn't even by a Ped.; it was by a Ped. Neurologist and it was even after we'd had an MRI done.
I read that you've contacted early intervention, but are waiting. Do you have an appt. set for an initial eval. and are just waiting for that date to arrive or are they not even at that point yet? Since your dr. feels that Tess' injury is permanent, then maybe you could use that to your advantage and get him to call early intervention and get things moving quicker. I've found that appts. suddenly open up amazingly when a dr. calls to make an appt.
About the financial situation, did you print out the list on the link I posted earlier? (
http://www.nichcy.org/stateshe/mi.htm) I see various contacts you can try (besides the EI b/c I assume that's the number you called):
"Special Education Funding for Children with Disabilities: Ages Birth Through 26"
"Programs for Children with Special Health Care Needs"
"State CHIP Program"
"Parent Training and Information Center (PTI)"
"Parent-To-Parent "
"John Cocciolone, CEO/President -- Easter Seals Michigan" (under "Other Disability Organizations")
I also found a couple other websites for Easter Seals in MI:
http://mi.easterseals.com/site/PageServ ... E_homepage (Easter Seals MI) and
http://mi.easterseals.com/ (Eastern Seals southeastern MI).
The key is to call all of these places and keep calling again and again if necessary, if you're not getting the results you want. Help is out there, but it usually takes some diligent effort to get it.
Regarding Shriners, I know that someone posted a link for you for the Chicago location. I would just like to suggest that before you go there, I'd post here asking if anyone has gone to that place and ask for their opinion. I'm not saying there's anything wrong with them, just that I don't recall ever reading about anyone here going there. I have read about a lot of experiences with Dr. Kozin at Shriner's in Philadephia. I know that's far from you, but there are programs out there for free airfare to medical appts.
About finding a pediatric therapist who accepts medicaid, have you tried he local children's hospital? Usually they accept medicaid. We didn't qualify for state medicaid / title XIX due to income, but we were able to get medicaid benefits another way. I went through Nicole's EI PT / service coordinator. She got me an application for medicaid, but I submitted it through our state DMR (Dept. of Mental Retardation) rather than through the DSS (Dept. of Social Svcs.). The reason we went through the DMR is b/c in our state, that's the organization that provides medical waiver. Basically what the medical waiver does is waives the income / assets requirement for obtaining medicaid. So we were able to get the state mediaid w/o having to meet the income / assets requirement. I'm quite sure you'd have to at least have done an initial evaluation for the EI program to determine if she qualifies for EI, then you could start the process of trying to get state medicaid / title XIX with an income waiver.
Try not to worry too much about what the future will bring. I know that's difficult.
~Tina,
bpmom@comcast.net, Mom to Nicole (6 y.o. w/LBPI) & Joshua (1 y.o. w/NOBPI)