Poynter Online
Go


Top Story

Wall Street Walks Away From Newspapers
Most Recent Articles
Most E-mailed
Recent Comments
Recent Tags
Community Activity

Poynter Training
Poynter Seminars
Small, in-person training experiences.
News University
Today's most popular courses on NewsU, Poynter's e-learning site for journalists.
Webinars
Our online classroom is just a click away. Learn more.
All Webinars

Diversity at Work

Home > Ethics & Diversity > Diversity at Work
Tools: Text Sizeor, Print, RSSRSS, Subscribe via e-mail
Susan LoTempio
New, fresh and alternative ways to encourage and enhance journalistic storytelling from different perspectives.
--"Black Brokers on Obama," National Public Radio
-- "Civil Rights' Leaders Wish List of Issues for New President," the Black Press of America
-- "Not Black President Obama, Just President Obama," New America Media

FEATURED COLUMNS/BLOGS
-- Poynter en Espanol -- Poynter Online's Spanish language page
-- Richard Prince's "Journal-isms," The Maynard Institute
-- Racialicious -- Blog about the intersection of race and pop culture
-- Immigration Chronicles -- The Houston Chronicle's Immigration blog
-- Color Lines, Magazine on race and politics
-- New America Media: Expanding the News Lens Through Ethnic Media, Aggregated content from more than 700 ethnic media partners

DEL.ICIO.US PAGE FOR DIVERSITY AT WORK

DIVERSITY TIP SHEETS/RESOURCES

DIVERSITY BIBLIOGRAPHY

FEEDBACK GUIDELINES


Children with Disabilities: Beyond Ashley
Every summer for the past 100 years, Cradle Beach Camp has hosted children with disabilities. It offers them fun in the sun on the shores of Lake Erie in western, upstate New York.

RELATED RESOURCES

"After Ashley: Covering Children with Severe Disabilities," Bioethicist Arthur Caplan on future coverage of children with disabilities. by Leann Frola



Interested in diversity? Check out our diversity seminars.

Sign up to receive Journalism with a Difference by e-mail: Click here

In recent years, even children with very complicated health issues have been able to enjoy the Cradle Beach experience. Sophisticated medical treatments and portable equipment unshackle them from home and hospital.

The staff also does everything it can to accommodate the children's medical needs. That enables them to play ball outdoors, swim in the pool, boat in the lake and sleep under the stars. (In the interest of full disclosure, I was a camper, counselor and am now a member of the Cradle Beach board.)

The challenge of caring for the campers' physical needs can be daunting. Some, especially those with severe autism, require one-on-one care and supervision. Many need help getting dressed, eating, negotiating the grounds and engaging in the daily activities. Their needs are a 24/7 responsibility. And that's just for a brief camping session.

Now, imagine what it must be like for parents who care for a child with severe disabilities. They, too, have a 24/7 responsibility. But their responsibility lasts for decades.

I thought of the children at Cradle Beach, and their parents, when I read about Ashley, the 9-year-old with severe disabilities who underwent medical procedures that would stunt her growth.

Predictably, a controversy erupted over whether Ashley's parents, and the Seattle doctors who treated her, had the ethical right to remove her uterus and breast tissue, and to give her large doses of estrogen so she would not grow.

According to news reports, shortly after Ashley's birth, she had feeding problems and showed severe developmental delays. Her doctors diagnosed brain damage. She is unable to walk, talk, roll over, sit up or hold a toy. Her parents told reporters that she is alert and smiles. But she doesn't make sustained eye contact.

Ashley is cared for at home. The medical treatments were performed to keep her at a more manageable and portable size. And they would prevent, the parents said, physical problems like bedsores, which can result from being in bed most of the time.

Let us at least agree that there are no easy answers for Ashley's parents and the thousands of other American families in similar situations.

However, it would be a shame if the complicated -- and unique -- ethical questions surrounding Ashley's care deterred reporters from pursuing the larger issues affecting families who have children with severe disabilities.

Their personal challenges are enormous and newsworthy.

Their children require, on a daily basis, costly and complex medical care, medications, equipment, specialized educational settings and support systems. These families are under great financial and personal strain to provide the extra care their children depend on. And the parents still have to find the energy to go to jobs outside the home, care for the emotional and physical needs of their other children, manage the household and find time to sleep.

They become masters at working the medical, insurance and educational bureaucracies. They learn how to apply for aid from state and federal agencies. But the money is never enough to cover their children's needs. And the services that would help often are not available.

Profiling families with children who are severely disabled creates compelling journalism.

These stories examine the social fabric of our communities. They focus on the quality of health care and education.

Few of us have the life-and-death challenges that these families cope with every single day. Few of us have to work so hard to keep our children healthy and functioning.

These parents don't want the media to feel sorry for them -- or canonize them -- for taking care of their children, the mother of an adult child with Down syndrome and other disabilities told me in an interview last year.

But they do want reporters to shine a light on how many hurdles they have to jump just to get the medical care and services their children require.

They would like the media to explore why more services aren't available, and why basic necessities like medical equipment cost so much.

They live in our communities. They understand the stresses that Ashley and her parents live under.

Their stories, even without the highly publicized ethical dimension, also deserve to be told.

Posted by Susan LoTempio 3:35 PM
Tools:
Comment, e-mail, Permalink, Share
Recent Comments:
Thanks Susan, Dear Susan, I just want to thank you for your... More.
Read All Comments (2 comments)
Username
Password
New User? Signup Now
Poynter Careers