Wednesday, April 16, 2014

The big sell- free assessment

The "free" assessment is probably where  most of the problems with prairie care really began. Not just the wrong info on pricing--
But the impression of what was happening. I was fairly clear my son had sensory issues. I was sold a fairy tale.
I kick myself daily.. (And wish I could update this blog more because I feel it is THAT important to warn parents about this for profit group. For profit means kids needed. Don't forget they are for profit. Prairie Care administrators will be happy to know I have been slowed by a serious diagnosis of my own.. I have seen some reviews from other parents and hope they will stand up and help.-- either way we are still strong in search rankings and plan to keep it that way).)

Anyway, my son, adverse to loudness and chaos, as discussed at the assessment - one day tells me a story of a girl who started screaming and was restrained by staff. Oh boy.

I hope it wasn't the same girl with the radiator pressed against her face I saw while there.

This is why I was sooooo unhappy when it became obvious my son's backpack wasn't checked - and why I was so concerned about the large stick pin he had found.

A nice boy in a pretty scary environment.
On a severely interaction they increased, with a file with days missing and duplicated as found by the Minnesota Ombudsman -- and with no answers for their weird billing practices they got dropped a letter from the BBB.

Classy place.

Again, we found all the help we needed with a great private practice doc and a 35 dollar co-pay.
He got him off that interaction, and our lives changed for the better.

What does Prairie Care do? $$$$$$