Las Vegas Review-Journal

Qatar surprises Touro University with $3M donation for autism center

Funds to be used for scholarshi­ps to the school’s autism center

- By Julie Wootton-greener

Touro University Nevada is getting a $3 million endowment gift for its autism center from the Middle Eastern nation of Qatar.

The funding for the private Henderson university’s Center for Autism and Developmen­tal Disabiliti­es will be used primarily for scholarshi­ps for Southern Nevada families who don’t have health insurance or can’t afford to pay for care at the center. The scholarshi­ps will be awarded beginning in June 2022.

“Touro has always helped clients if they can’t afford services,” said Shelley Berkley, CEO and senior provost for the university’s western division. “This will go a very long way to ensure that nobody with autism ever gets turned away from our facility and that we will be able to enhance the types of therapies that we provide for autistic children and their families.”

The university plans to invest the donated money and hopes the interest will be what pays for scholarshi­ps for families, Berkley said. “We would like to keep the principal so it would be an ongoing endowment that would last forever.”

Touro’s autism center, which opened in 2008, serves children from 18 months to 12 years old. In addition to diagnosis, it offers services such as occupation­al, physical, speech-language and applied behavioral analysis therapies.

Before the arrival of the COVID-19 pandemic, the center was logging about 535 patient visits per month. But the center closed in spring 2020 and “lost a number of therapists,” Berkley said, noting it’s now gradually reopening.

“As the restrictio­ns lift and we get back to whatever the new normal is going to be, we’re going to be able to hopefully exceed the 535 patient visits,” Berkley said, adding, “If we need more therapists, we will hire them.”

Berkley said a hope for the future is to also expand services to include children ages 13 to 18.

Autism spectrum disorder is a condition that can include challenges with behavior and communica

tion, and is four times more common in boys than girls, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Qatar’s involvemen­t

Touro’s autism center is one of six U.S. organizati­ons to receive a donation from Qatar announced this month.

Autism is not rare in Qatar, which had a population of 2.83 million in 2019, according to the World Bank. A 2019 autism prevalence survey conducted in the Persian Gulf nation estimated that about 1 in 88 children there has an autism spectrum disorder.

That compares to about 1 in 54 children in the United States.

The royal family of Qatar also has had “an internatio­nal footprint when it comes to autism and improving the quality of life for those with autism,” Berkley said.

For example, she said, Sheikha Moza bint Nasser, wife of former Emir Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani, proposed creating World Autism Awareness Day, which is now recognized on April 2 each year.

In a statement to the Review-journal, Meshal bin Hamad Al-thani, Qatar’s ambassador to the United States, said the Persian Gulf nation remains committed to increasing internatio­nal awareness about the disorder.

“Touro University Nevada’s Center for Autism and Developmen­tal Disabiliti­es is already doing incredible work for children facing developmen­tal challenges,” he said. “This gift will pave the way for patients who may otherwise have seen cost as a barrier to afford treatment at the center, which is particular­ly important as families recover from the adverse economic effects of COVID-19.”

One family’s experience

Henderson residents Gary Haase and Thuan Tong-haase have been bringing their 6-year-old daughter Akara to Touro’s autism center for nearly three years.

Akara enjoys coming to the center and views it as a fun event, Gary Haase said, noting she calls it “Touro University playground.”

Haase said the therapies have had an unbelievab­le effect on his daughter, who was diagnosed at age 3.

Pre-pandemic, Akara was receiving a few types of therapy — with the exception of speech therapy — under one roof at Touro. Now, she’s only receiving applied behavioral analysis at the center since the other therapies aren’t yet back up and running yet due to COVID-19 impacts.

Haase said that in his daughter’s younger years, he and his wife weren’t sure what her capabiliti­es would be and as parents were extremely concerned.

“There was a time when she was younger where we didn’t know whether she would be fully verbal or not,” he said.

Now, Akara has shown she’s probably going to be fully verbal and speaks beautifull­y with prompting, Haase said. She’s also made many physical improvemen­ts, too, he added proudly.

 ?? K.M. Cannon Las Vegas Review-journal @Kmcannonph­oto ?? Akara Haase, 6, works with behavior analyst Adam Volker on Wednesday at the Center for Autism and Developmen­tal Disabiliti­es at Touro University Nevada in Henderson. Touro’s autism center opened in 2008.
K.M. Cannon Las Vegas Review-journal @Kmcannonph­oto Akara Haase, 6, works with behavior analyst Adam Volker on Wednesday at the Center for Autism and Developmen­tal Disabiliti­es at Touro University Nevada in Henderson. Touro’s autism center opened in 2008.
 ?? Las Vegas Review-journal @Kmcannonph­oto ?? K.M. Cannon
Akara Haase, 6, poses for a portrait in a learning and play area called The Park at the Center for Autism and Developmen­tal Disabiliti­es at Touro University Nevada in Henderson. The university is getting a $3 million endowment gift for its autism center.
Las Vegas Review-journal @Kmcannonph­oto K.M. Cannon Akara Haase, 6, poses for a portrait in a learning and play area called The Park at the Center for Autism and Developmen­tal Disabiliti­es at Touro University Nevada in Henderson. The university is getting a $3 million endowment gift for its autism center.

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