{"id":87147,"date":"2026-02-24T10:17:38","date_gmt":"2026-02-24T15:17:38","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/fireflyin.org\/?p=87147"},"modified":"2026-06-26T14:46:36","modified_gmt":"2026-06-26T18:46:36","slug":"kris-corner-first-steps","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/fireflyin.org\/cnh\/resources\/news-library\/kris-corner-first-steps\/","title":{"rendered":"Kris’ Corner – First Steps"},"content":{"rendered":"

For those who are fostering a kiddo under the age of three, I want to make you aware of a resource you might not know about: First Steps.<\/p>\n

As it states on their website, the mission of First Steps is \u201cto partner with Hoosier families whose young children are experiencing developmental delays and connect them with services that help them promote their child\u2019s development.\u201d<\/p>\n

First Steps is a program that I first learned about when my now 22 year-old was an infant. He was born with torticollis, and even though we tried to remedy it with some stretches on our own, it was not quite enough. We were referred to First Steps by the pediatrician (although FYI: if you have specific concerns you\u2019d like an opinion on, you can contact First Steps yourself and do a direct referral).<\/p>\n

Basically it works like this: Once the referral goes through, you are contacted for an intake and then an evaluation (all of this is done in home, which is especially nice if you have other children; you don\u2019t need to find a sitter or take them all along to these appointments).<\/p>\n

If the child qualifies for services, and assuming your foster child is on Medicaid, you will pay nothing and the therapy or therapies will happen in your home; for children not on Medicaid, I believe it is insurance-based but I do have not have personal experience with that and the website is not as clear as it could be.<\/p>\n

For my older son, he qualified only for Physical Therapy (PT) once a week. So once services began, we had a PT come to our home once a week for an hour. She would spend time stretching him, but more than that, she would teach me what to do to continue the work on the other days\u2026which is where the real progress in his condition took place. Obviously the weekly appointments were crucial to ensure I was staying on track with my \u201ctasks\u201d, but the fact that I became knowledgeable and equipped helped me do what he needed; point being, we were able to work as a team to get him on track.<\/p>\n

And as what I think is a kind of cool aside: Fast forward 11 years later when we took placement of a medically-fragile 3 month old (who had severe torticollis, as well as several other needs), we were already trained in how to do the stretches so we were able to begin them right away, as we awaited his First Steps referral to go through and for services to begin.<\/p>\n

And speaking of services, I need to explain that First Steps provides so much more than PT (our youngest, in fact, used PT, OT, Speech and DT).\u00a0 So just for your reference, the services available through First Steps include:<\/p>\n