In this podcourse episode, Sophie Anais Renoir returns, a Speech-Language Pathologist who has advocated for early intervention and New York’s consumer-directed patient assistance program (CDPAP).
Sophie explains how clinician self-advocacy influences patient outcomes and family trust, emphasizing collective action and alliances with families.
She describes major early intervention barriers including low reimbursement, lack of providers, long service delays, inadequate mileage/supplies/PPE support, safety risks in home-based care, limited multilingual clinicians, and inequitable access for low-income and immigrant families; she notes New York’s crisis, telehealth reimbursement cuts, and proposed but limited fixes such as reimbursement increases, SLPAs, and loan programs.
Reforms include centering disabled individuals’ voices and recognizing early support reduces later costs. Strategies include using ethics guidance, educating families on rights/resources, joining professional associations, collaborating locally with colleagues and officials, framing advocacy as organizational benefit, mentoring, and protecting mental health while staying informed.