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Dad abandons son with autism at Longmont hospital and human service workers refuse to take custody

www.cbsnews.com Dad abandons son with autism at Longmont hospital and human service workers refuse to take custody

A 13-year-old boy with autism has been forced to live at UCHealth Longs Peak Hospital in Longmont for three weeks after his dad abandoned him.

Dad abandons son with autism at Longmont hospital and human service workers refuse to take custody

A 13-year-old boy with Autism has been forced to live at UCHealth Longs Peak Hospital in Longmont for three weeks after his dad abandoned him and human service workers told hospital employees it would take months to secure placement for the boy due to a lack of resources. A hospital employee emailed State Representative Judy Amabile of Boulder last week asking her to intervene. The employee said Boulder County Human Service workers initially agreed to take custody of the boy and then refused saying he was safe in an emergency department. Amabile says state and county human service workers told her they are working on finding placement for the boy but she says it is unconscionable that he has been forced to live in a hospital for nearly a month, "I don't know whether the dad may or may not have reached out and ask for help but may not been able to get any help. Like we just... we don't know, but what we do know is that you can't just leave a 13-year-old in an ER for weeks on end with no end in sight." She says she also reached out to both Boulder County and State Human Service workers but they would only say that they were working on it. Madlynn Ruble with the Colorado Department of Human Services said while the state is working to increase residential treatment, it lacks options for children with highly complex medical and behavioral health needs, due in part to a lack of providers. "Every month there are children and youth who are either living in residential settings out of state, sleeping in county offices or hotels overnight, or staying in hospital or detention settings past when it is appropriate for them to be there," she said.

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  • The article focuses on this one little boy, but really this problem is systematic there. This is absolutely awful. What if a child with special needs was being abused? This situation proves the state doesn't care about those kids and would have left them right where they were.