When Andrew Kavchak\'s younger son was diagnosed with autism, he expected that Canada\'s public health insurance system would cover the cost of treatment.
Forewords are contributed.
The author describes his experiences and intersperses the story with his commentary and Reflections along the way.
It also includes a discussion of the Auton case lawsuit launched by a few families in British Columbia against the provincial government that ended up in the Supreme Court of Canada in 2004, and surveys the multitude of pleas for the federal government to develop and implement a National Autism Strategy.
The book provides a historical overview of varying efforts and milestones by numerous organizations and individuals in their provincial and federal campaigns to help improve access to Autism Treatment across Canada.
In this book the author describes the circumstances around his son\'s diagnosis and his introduction to government indifference, including unconscionable wait lists and age cut-offs.
Andrew Kavchak has promoted the Medicare for Autism Now (MFAN) message from the beginning of his Autism activism.
It was then that he realized that political lobbying to end the discrimination in Canada\'s Medicare system was going to be necessary.
He was advised that it was in his son\'s best interests to resort to the private sector, at tremendous expense, to help his son develop to his fullest potential.
Andrew Kavchak\'s son was placed on a Treatment waiting list with no indication of how many months or years the waiting would last.
Yet, in the province of Ontario and across the country, such Autism Treatment programs are most often administered by the departments of social services and not paid for by Canada\'s Medicare system.
The medical and scientific communities have known since the 1980s that the application of Intensive Behaviour Intervention (IBI) Treatment based on the principles of Applied Behaviour Analysis (ABA) is effective and evidence-based Treatment for autism.
It didn\'t.
When Andrew Kavchak\'s younger son was diagnosed with autism, he expected that Canada\'s public health insurance system would cover the cost of treatment