KidsCare Therapy Blog

No More Rainy Days

Tuesday, August 31st, 2010 | by kidscare

Victoria Glasgow, Case Manager

Have you ever had a rainy day?  Everyone has. Imagine the worst rainy day you’ve ever experienced. Who did you turn to for help?  Now, imagine having that same rainy day, but without anyone to turn to, or any idea of where to go for help. To help alleviate this problem, KidsCare Therapy provides case management services to the families of the patients we serve.  As a social worker, I connect a patient and his or her family to valuable community resources, and then guide them through the process of accessing services.  

Case management, in my eyes, is like a great adventure— you never know what type of challenge is around the corner, or how you are going to affect a person’s life.  As a case manager, I not only assist families in addressing their concerns regarding their child or family’s needs, but also help them identify resources of which they were unaware.  Case mangers assist families in gaining access to necessary medical, social/family, nutritional, educational, vocational, developmental and other health care services. 

During my time at KidsCare Therapy, I have had many opportunities to be that pot of gold at the end of the rainbow for our clients and their families on their rainy days.  I recall receiving a phone call from a mother who did not know what was going on with her son David, she just knew that something was not right. I not only was able to help the mother get David diagnosed with Autism, but I was also able to help her get him into a preschool program for children with disabilities.  Together, we worked to get her connected with community support groups and other specialized programs for children with Autism.  

On another occasion, I received a call from a mother who was having a lot of problems with her apartment complex, water and electric bills.  As you can imagine, the mother was very worried about being kicked out of the apartment and the possibility of being without water or electricity right when Dallas was expecting a big snow storm to hit the area.  The mother had requested, several times, that a water leak be repaired, but the apartment complex did not want to accept the responsibility and make the repair.  I was able to help this mother find out who she needed to contact in the city to help determine where the leak was coming from and who was responsible.   It was later discovered that it was the apartment complex’s responsibility. The city provided the mother the needed documentation to give the apartment complex to fix the leak. The mother was able to get her water bill reduced, but she was behind on her electric bill.  I was able to provide her with some community resources that assist families in paying their electricity bills. She called the agencies one by one and was able to get some assistance with her electric bill. In the end, the mother was able to find even more help through a local church that helped her pay the electric bill.  

Caring for a developmentally delayed child is difficult enough, but the added problems of everyday life can sometimes leave parents wondering how they’ll manage. I love that I’m able to connect them with the resources to help them provide the very best care and conditions for their child, and I’m proud to work for a company that sees this as a necessity.


Mondays at KidsCare Therapy

Friday, July 30th, 2010 | by admin

Cortney Baker, SLP and KidsCare Therapy Owner

I think that people so often get up, get dressed, and go to work five days a week, and live life waiting for the other two days to roll around. We joke around, “Is it Friday yet?” and it seems like everyone absolutely dreads Mondays. Are you one of those? I can completely understand if you are; but I want you to take a minute and really think about what an impact you make in those five days when working at KidsCare Therapy. And hopefully attempt to change your view about your five day work week. Because believe it or not, folks, we are changing lives!

I started doing home-health care in 2002. I had worked in the schools for about a year, and I just didn’t feel like I was making a difference in the lives of the kids on my caseload. I had gone to school to be a speech therapist, but I didn’t really feel much of my time was spent doing therapy! A friend of mine had come across an opportunity to do part-time work for a pediatric home health agency and shared her experience with me. I knew that I hadn’t been happy with what I was doing, but had no idea how much my life was about to change!

My first patient was a four-year-old little girl named Sabrina*. Sabrina had been born perfectly healthy at nine months’ gestation. When she was about one year old, she was riding in her car seat in the front of her mom’s vehicle and was involved in a hit and run. She was obviously shaken up and crying, but overall she looked “fine”. Sabrina and her mom went to the hospital to ensure that nothing was wrong; however, that’s not the news she received after being examined. Sabrina was diagnosed quadriplegic as a result of the airbag exploding and the trauma she endured to her head/neck. I can’t recall the specifics now, but she had a trachea and was on a vent when I met her, as well as being fed through a g-tube. She had no voluntary head or body movements or words, but could communicate with her facial expressions and vowel-like vocalizations.

Sabrina was absolutely beautiful. She had long, thick, curly black hair, and the prettiest full, rosy cheeks of any little girl I’ve ever seen. What made my day is that every time I would walk in the room, her face would light up and she’d give me the biggest smile! All of my problems would just amazingly fall away when I was with her. Sabrina and I worked on so many different things during the time I was her therapist— making choices, taking first bites, oral motor strengthening, imitation of speech sounds— she was such an inspiration, and she definitely taught me to be a better therapist. I can still picture that huge, gorgeous smile and how her whole face would light up when I came to see her. I often wonder how she’s doing now.

I never once felt the “Monday blues,” and I never dreaded going to work. I knew that what I did was making a difference in not only her life, but mine as well. I wanted to spread the word about this amazing secret called home health, but felt that as a single therapist I was limited in what I could accomplish. That’s when the idea of starting KidsCare Therapy hatched: I would start my own company, and instead of helping 15-18 kids, I could help hundreds, maybe even thousands! I was young, naïve, and had no idea what I was doing, but I knew I could do it! I wanted everyone to experience the life change that I did.

In October 2003, KidsCare Therapy opened its doors for business and we haven’t looked back!And since then…well, that’s another story!