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A Forgotten Disability: A Parental Survey on Patients in West Virginia with Cleft Lip and Palate
There are different forms of cleft lip and palate. A cleft lip can be unilateral or bilateral, with or without cleft palate. Cleft palate can also occur on their own and involve the hard or soft palate of the mouth.
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2017 WVU CED Diversity and Disability Fellowship Project: Diversity and Disability Educational Content Expansion in Medical Curriculum
The West Virginia University Center for Excellence in Disabilities (WVU CED) Diversity and Disability Fellowship (DDF) program works in collaboration with the West Virginia Leadership Education in Neurodevelopmental Disabilities (LEND) program. In 2016-2017 and through the LEND and DDF programs, a second-year diversity fellow continued to obtain real-life experience by attending and supporting several interdisciplinary clinical and field experiences including the Social Group for Teens with Autism, the intensive Autism Services Delivery (iASD) Clinic, the Feeding and Swallowing Clinic, the Next Steps Clinic, the Klingberg Neurodevelopmental Clinic and the Children with Special Health Care Needs (CSHCN) Clinic.
Read the full 2017 WVU CED Diversity and Disability Fellowship Project Poster (PDF)
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Cultivating Change: Implementing and Responding to a Center-wide Cultural and Linguistic Competence Assessment
Assess the WVU CED's current strengths and areas for growth related to cultural and linguistic competence.
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Advocating for Client Unmet Needs/Gaps in Services for Persons with Feeding and Swallowing Disorders
Feeding disorders are a major challenge for persons with disabilities, especially children with disabilities. They can affect a child's language and motor development.
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Finding Their Voices: How LEND Student Therapists Utilize Mand Training to Assist Young Children with Autism to Develop Language
Manding, or requesting, is a critical step to effective communication. A child requests a desired object or action and is rewarded by receiving it; he or she will be more likely to continue manding. Manding is one of the first steps in developing more complex communication skills.
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Developing and Sustaining State Partnerships That Quicken State Response to Individuals with Disabilities and Their Families During Natural Disasters
Emergency preparedness efforts at the local and state levels are generally limited for individuals with disabilities and their families and children.
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Lifting our Voices for Inclusive Community Music - Making:An Intergenerational Choir
In spring 2017, a board-certified music therapist began the Creative Arts Therapy Program at WVU CED and launched an Intergenerational Choir. The Intergenerational Choir is a pilot program created to provide direct services for staff, community members and their families through the power of music. Its goals are to provide a music making experience for people of all abilities that promotes independence and self-esteem while fostering lasting relationships and improving overall quality of life; and facilitate integration for those with disabilities throughout West Virginia's diverse communities. For people with disabilities, similar community music therapy programs have found that participation in music experiences creates "a sense of engagement and affiliation" within the community and serves "as a catalyst and medium through which to develop other aspects of a person's life" (Soshensky, 2011; Gosine, 2017).
Read the Full Lifting our Voices for Inclusive Community Music AUCD Poster (PDF)
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Returning to the Classroom After Concussion: West Virginia's Road to Return to Learn
Each year thousands of children in the United States sustain concussions.
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West Virginia's Traumatic Brain Injury Registry: A Rural State's Chronological Exploration of TBI Trends
Effective October 2007, West Virginia State Code required acute care facilities to report limited patient information about moderate to severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) hospitalizations to the West Virginia University Center for Excellence in Disabilities (WVU CED) within 7 days of injury to be entered into the WV TBI Registry. The number of TBI hospitalizations reported varies widely by year (Table 1). As a matter of practice, the WVU CED mails a follow-up survey consisting of 12 closed-ended questions to all reported individuals.
Read the West Virginia's Traumatic Brain Injury Registry Poster (PDF)
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