Houston Chronicle

Airports making travel easier for autistic passengers.

- By Shivani Vora |

For Gearoid Mannion and his wife, Michelle, who live in County Clare, Ireland, air travel with their two autistic sons, Conor, 9, and Darragh, 7, is usually nothing short of a nightmare. The noise level, crowds and announceme­nts at airports overwhelm the boys, and waiting in security and boarding lines is a concept that they don’t understand, Gearoid Mannion said. “They get red in the face and start running around and crying and screaming or run toward the exit, because they want to go back home,” he said.

The family’s recent experience at Shannon Airport in Ireland, when they were en route to a vacation in Málaga, Spain, however, gave them hope that flying didn’t have to be so stressful. Gearoid Mannion had heard about the airport’s recent initiative to ease the journey for individual­s with autism spectrum disorder — the name for a group of developmen­tal disorders that include autism — and called its customer service desk before their trip to relay that he would be traveling with autistic children.

Upon check-in, the foursome were given wristbands and orange baseball caps that identified them as a family with passengers with autism spectrum disorder and allowed them to jump to the front of the security line. Then they headed to the airport’s new Sensory Room, meant to soothe those with sensory issues, similar to those of Conor and Darragh; the room was shielded from outside noise and had a wavy wall, color-changing LED lights, bean bags and other items that kept them happily occupied. And to avoid the challenge of waiting in a boarding line, the Mannions were able to board last. “Unlike the past, our trip was actually manageable,” Gearoid Mannion said.

Shannon Airport isn’t alone in its efforts to ease air travel for those with autism spectrum disorder: Some airlines and other airports around the world are also part of the movement, and in the United States, the Arc, a group in Washington representi­ng people with intellectu­al and developmen­tal disabiliti­es, including autism, is a major player.

Part of the reason for this recent support may be the rise in autism spectrum disorder. In the U.S. alone, 1 in 68 children has autism spectrum disorder, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the prevalence of autism in children increased 6 percent to 15 percent each year between 2002 and 2010.

Shannon Airport opened the sensory room and started the autism identifica­tion system, because autistic flyers were coming through the airport daily and having a hard time while they were there, said Nandi O’Sullivan, a spokeswoma­n for the airport. “We saw that people with autism would get agitated and wanted to make them and their families more comfortabl­e,” she said.

Delta Air Lines, in partnershi­p with Hartsfield­Jackson Atlanta Internatio­nal Airport and the Arc, opened a similar sensory room in the airport last year and filled it with toys and items commonly used to soothe those with autism spectrum disorder, such as a mini ball pit.

Airports are difficult settings for people with autism spectrum disorder, because they can be hypersensi­tive to noise and crowds, said Dr. Wendy Moyal, a psychiatri­st at the Child Mind Institute in New York City who is an autism spectrum disorder specialist. “For a person who is easily overstimul­ated, like an autistic individual can be, the commotion of an airport can elicit tremendous anxiety,” she said. “Also, since such individual­s have limitation­s understand­ing social contexts and low frustratio­n tolerance, security might feel unfair and lines challengin­g to wait in.”

Vancouver Internatio­nal Airport is part of a group of airports offering mock flight experience­s for people with autism spectrum disorder and their families to help acclimate them to flying.

Elsewhere in the U.S., the Arc runs practice flights through an event called Wings for Autism, in which one of its local chapters teams with an airport, an airline and the Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion. In some instances, the planes even taxi with participan­ts on board. La Guardia Airport, in New York City, and Washington Dulles Internatio­nal Airport are two of the 30 airports around the country collaborat­ing with the Arc on the event.

These trial runs, Moyal said, are incredibly effective in helping people with autism spectrum disorder become more comfortabl­e with flying. “Being prepared and familiar with the setting is key for individual­s with autism to have an easier travel experience,” she said.

Families said the practice flights give them confidence. Nicole and Jason Beitzel, of Watkinsvil­le, Georgia, have only taken road trips with their daughter, Abby, 4, who is autistic and nonverbal, because they were afraid she couldn’t handle flying.

Their perspectiv­e changed after attending a Wings for Autism event at Hartsfield-Jackson airport.

“Getting a dress rehearsal of the flying process with Abby has made us open to the idea of air travel with her,” Nicole Beitzel said. “Our dream destinatio­n is Hawaii, and, instead of thinking that we would never get to go, we have hope that we can take the trip later this year.”

 ?? John Spink / Associated Press ?? The sights, sounds and crowds of airports can easily overwhelm autistic passengers, especially children.
John Spink / Associated Press The sights, sounds and crowds of airports can easily overwhelm autistic passengers, especially children.

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