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Special Needs Expo aimed at helping families find all options

Times Leader - 9/29/2018

Sept. 29--PLAINS TWP. -- An area nonprofit is hoping to help the families of people with special needs have a brighter tomorrow by bringing as many local agencies as possible into one room.

Brighter Journeys held its first Special Needs Expo, called "Connecting the Dots," Friday in a conference room at Mohegan Sun Pocono.

Lisa Urbanski, president and founder of Brighter Journeys, said the expo is exactly the sort of thing she was looking for as a parent of a child with special needs.

"I'm used to thinking outside the box," Urbanski said.

And that outside-the-box thinking led to the expo. According to her, the expo was host to 51 organizations that each catered to people with special needs.

Urbanski said the expo didn't focus on a single type of disability; instead, health organizations were on hand to provide information on how to best help people with both mental and physical disabilities.

Among those 51 organizations were Geisinger, the Graham Academy and Highmark, along with other nursing organizations and therapists. Organizations were providing information about new forms of therapy and new medical devices that patients could consider. There were also a series of speakers throughout the day to make patients and family members aware of treatments they might not have considered.

Heather Gibson, of Pringle, said she is the parent of a 2-year-old child who was just recently diagnosed with autism. She said her son, Jaxon, is non-verbal, and she was at the expo to see what options are available to her.

Gibson said she's thankful for the information she got at the expo, saying she was especially interested in a new therapy system called applied behavioral analysis, or ABA.

"It's supposed to help with day-to-day things, like putting your shoes on," she said, explaining that things like this would be an important focus due to her son's diagnosis.

Gibson said that, since her son's diagnosis, it's been "overwhelming," and she's glad for the expo, as it allowed her to find many of the options available to her all in one place.

When Brighter Journeys isn't hosting events such as these, which Urbanski hopes will become annual, she said the organization is helping families of special needs people by providing them with grants for therapies and items their insurance may have denied. For more information on the non-profit, visit their website at www.brighterjourneys.net.

Reach Patrick Kernan at 570-991-6386 or on Twitter @PatKernan

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