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How to cope with your child with Autism if they self-injure

As frightening as it can be sometimes for parents,
self-injury for children with autism is not all that uncommon.

Not all self-injury means the same thing on every occasion
nor is it the same in every child with autism.

The first thing a parent should do is decide if it is giving
the child with autism some pleasure from the act
of injuring or if the injury is a way of trying to tell
the parent something.

For example, your child may repetitively bang his or her
head against the wall as a sign that an ear infection is
going on.

It can often be triggered by excessive arousal.

This becomes the caregiver’s job to reduce the external
noise and other arousal issues that can trigger the onset
of self-injurious behavior in a child with autism.

Certain frequencies of sound will trigger the behavior more
so than others.

On the other hand, the child with autism may be using the
behavior to bring on a heightened sense of stimulation to the
body.

A child like this needs training in sensory integration
to normalize the senses.

Other kids with autism will engage in self-injury as a
social means of getting attention or as a means of
avoiding doing a task.

For example, the attention-getting behavior should be
ignored and the child who uses the behaviors to avoid
getting out of a task should be encouraged to finish the task.

The trick to any unusual behavior is to do a functional
analysis.

In other words, what happens before the behavior and also
afterwards to the child with autism?

Also is this a routine behavior (i.e. something learned)?

Secondly, what, if anything controlled the behavior in the
child with autism?

Answering these questions will give you a means of managing
the behavior in many cases.

This is just one of the many tricks, tips and techniques
that you can use to cope with your Autistic child’s
behaviors that feature in my new book “The Parenting
Autism Resource Guide”. Which you can learn
more about by visiting
http://www.ParentingAutismChild.com/


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Choosing a school Child and Adolescent Issues  Communication Skills  Dentist Tips  Developing Speech  Famous Autistic People

Food Obsessions  Free Autism Stuff  Genetics  Gluten/Casein Free Diet  Hair Cuts  Health and Hygiene Health Care Needs

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Parental Relationship Help  PECS  Play Therapy  Puberty  Reward/Punishment  Schedules  Self Injury  Self Stimulation

Sensory Motor Integration  Sensory Stimulation  Sexual Behaviors  Shopping Trips  Sleep Problems  Social Thinking

Social Skills  Social Stories  Siblings  Son Rise Program  Speech Therapy  Supplimentation  Tantrums in Public

TEACCH  Toddlers  Tips For Teachers  Toilet Training part 1  Toilet Training part 2  Transition  Weighted Blankets

 

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