[three_fourth last=”yes” spacing=”yes” background_color=”” background_image=”” background_repeat=”no-repeat” background_position=”left top” border_size=”0px” border_color=”” border_style=”” padding=”” class=”” id=””][title size=”2″ content_align=”left” style_type=”single” sep_color=”#777777″ class=”” id=””]Working to Complete the Puzzle of Autism Care[/title][imageframe lightbox=”no” style_type=”bottomshadow” bordercolor=”#000000″ bordersize=”0px” borderradius=”0″ stylecolor=”” align=”none” link=”” linktarget=”_self” animation_type=”0″ animation_direction=”down” animation_speed=”0.1″ class=”” id=””] [/imageframe][separator style_type=”shadow” top_margin=”” bottom_margin=”” sep_color=”#bc2b2b” icon=”” width=”” class=”” id=””][fusion_text] 

The numbers are growing: official estimates from the Centers for Disease Control stipulate that 1 in 68 children (ages 3 to 17) in America has been diagnosed with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD), according to the most recent data available in 2014.

That number is likely higher, however, due to the limitations of data collection. In 2015, a government survey pegged the number at 1 in 45, or about two percent of all children in America.

“The 1 in 45 estimate is not surprising and is likely a more accurate representation of autism prevalence…” according to a response about the study on the Autism Speaks website, www.autismspeaks.org. (Austism Speaks is the world’s leading autism science and advocacy organization.)

If that number is realistic, then in Brevard almost 2,400 children could be affected, with limited resources to help families, caregivers and parents address the many facets of ASD.

Enter James Holz, Esquire, a former Wall Street trader who left the industry after 9/11 to pursue a legal career in Florida. For the past five years, Holz and his wife, Pam, have been putting the puzzle of ASD education, resources and financial support together one piece at a time.

Starting Anew

In 2012, Holz and his family needed help for their son, Loki Xavier, who was six years old at the time. Diagnosed with ASD, the couple found it difficult to source community, education and programmatic resources for Loki without making it a full time job.

This experience led to the couple’s first priority: to ensure that children with ASD have access to early interventional therapy, which is key to the long-term management of the condition. In 2014, the Holzes opened Kaleidoscope Interventions in central Melbourne.

“The purpose for opening the Kaleidoscope Interventions (KI) clinic was to provide families with access to quality therapy,” Holz said.

“Therapy can be performed in the child’s home or onsite at our facility on Hibiscus Boulevard,” he said. (Another clinic is planned to open on Nasa Blvd. this May). The facility offers one-on-one therapy with a registered behavior technician with hands-on therapy and individualized programs as determined by a board certified behavioral analyst. All staff is trained to treat families with empathy and respect.

Along the way, the couple also recognized that the public schools in Brevard were not equipped to handle the specific and tailored needs of children with ASD. So, they created an environment where Loki and his peers would thrive and learn – at their level.

Plans for Expansion West to Kissimmee/Orlando

Holz also talks about spreading their circle of support west to the Kissimmee/Orlando area. “The foundation just acquired the Willow School of Maitland, which is for developmentally delayed children as well. That’s one of our expansions. The other news is that we’re building a facility in the Interstate 4/U.S. Highway 192 corridor. Our goal is to build a 20,000-25,000-square-foot facility which will be our second Puzzle Box Academy. The goal is to assist 180 kids, with a staff of about 105.”

Holz is in the planning stages now, and there is a lot of permitting, construction and prep work to get that location ready. Holz adds, “Construction itself is roughly ten months, so it’s really about 13 to 16 months from identification of the land to having the school completely built.” The goal is to buy the land within the next three to six months, and then open the school within two years.

The new facility will take on many of the aspects of multiple facilities in Melbourne, all under one roof. Holz says, “Puzzle Box would be for students as it is now, but they would also be receiving various services through Kaleidoscope Interventions. So from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. is pure education; it meets all the requirements as a year round school open for 46 weeks. And then from roughly 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. is 100 percent therapy.”

This new facility will also house a Holz Center to provide additional services to the community. “I think a Holz Center is going to be incorporated in every expansion,” Holz notes. The Holz Center would help those families not attending the school to coordinate services — a vital aspect of what the foundation stands for.

Holz added, “Awareness without helping [to] educate is pointless, and it is cruel to not help a family when there is a means to do so.”


Puzzle Box Academy

2180 Julian Ave. NE, Palm Bay

Kaleidoscope Interventions

1855 W. Hibiscus Blvd., Melbourne

The Holz Center

125 E. Nasa Blvd., Melbourne

For more information:

call (321) 265-4429

PuzzleboxAcademy.com

ThePieceFits.com (for Kaleidoscope Interventions)

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