Families with Autism Helping Families with Autism
TACA Family Stories
Before During After

I had Christian when I was 19 years old.  For the first year of his life I couldn’t imagine anything being wrong with my baby.  He smiled; he laughed; he rolled, crawled and walked on time.  At age one he had a massive overload for his little immune system.  He had two ear infections, a high fever, back to back treatment of major antibiotics and he was given his MMR, varicella and HIB vaccines while he was still very sick.  Christian faded away for the next 6 months.

At age two he was diagnosed with full syndrome Autism.  I met an amazing mother who introduced me to the group Talk About Curing Autism.  Before I found out about TACA, I had no clue that there was hope for my child. From that day on I knew that it was my job to get my son back and undue what had been done to him.

It has been three years since Christian was diagnosed with Autism.  I had taken what I had learned from TACA, found wonderful therapists, began a diet, found a DAN! Doctor, and took control of my child’s health.  I heard his first word when he was 38 months old, and let me tell you, it was worth the wait.   

Today Christian attends a typical private preschool. He is the only child in the class with a diagnosis…and none of the other parents know that.  He speaks clearly, has friends, reads, pretends on the playground and even knows what he wants to be when he grows up (which of course changes weekly). 

I can honestly say, if I had not found that mom (you know who you are), and not been introduced to TACA, I don’t know where Christian would be today and I don’t know if I would ever have been able to help other parents starting this journey.  Thank you TACA, thank you my hero mom, and thank you Christian for fighting this with me.  I love you.

Chelsi, Washington State

Autism & Insurance

Autism Insurance Legislation

There are a number of efforts happening throughout the country to get autism treatments, or at least ABA therapy, covered in states. Parents and advocates are working together to get coverage. You can help too. Keep reading.           

States that have insurance legislation in place (some better than others):

  • Indiana: Already in effect
  • Texas: Took effect Jan. 1, 2008. Covers children over age 2, up to age 6.
  • South Carolina: Effective July 1, 2008. Covers $50,000 per year up to age 16.
  • Minnesota: Already in effect
  • Arizona: Effective June 30, 2009. Covers therapy costing as much as $50,000 per year up to age 9, $25,000 per year up to age 16.
  • Florida: Effective April 2009. Covers $36,000 per year, $200,000 lifetime up to age 18.
  • Pennsylvania: Effective July 1, 2009. Covers $36,000 per year up to age 21, no lifetime cap.
  • Louisiana: Effective Jan. 1, 2009. Covers $36,000 per year up to age 17.
  • Twenty-seven others have some sort of proposed insurance legislation proposed for the upcoming legislative session. Thirteen currently have no pending legislation. *As of September 2008

    Want to get involved? Join the Autism Insurance Legislation Advocacy Group

    Parity vs. Coverage

    Parity means that if a particular therapy or treatment is covered for one diagnosis on their plan, then it’s also covered for autism. 

    Coverage means what treatments are covered.  The issue with ABA in particular, is that ABA is not a treatment for ANY other diagnosis and the insurance companies have been using that in denials. 

    Why Coverage in ALL States is Important

    YOU NEED TO KNOW THIS!  You live in North Carolina but your insurance policy is funded and written out of Colorado.  Whose law governs your insurance?  Colorado.  The state where the insurance policy is funded and written is key.  The front page of your policy usually states where it’s written and funded. 

    See Listing of all Autism & Insurance Articles

    PAGE OPTIONS

    Printer Friendly Page