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‏إظهار الرسائل ذات التسميات Washington Post. إظهار كافة الرسائل
‏إظهار الرسائل ذات التسميات Washington Post. إظهار كافة الرسائل

Autism Awareness and Action Needed for Autistic Adults

Linda H. Davis in Still Overlooking Autistic Adults in Saturday's Washington Post reminds us of our neglect of autistic adults and the bill that will come due more and more with each passing day. She describes very colorfully the realities facing the United States and by extension Canada where we too have neglected to seriously address adult autism issues. She describes a US population of autistic adults larger than the city of Minneapolis. I recommend that everyone with an interest in autism issues read Ms. Davis' commentary and I commend her and the Washington Post for raising this issue.

How will this Autism Metropolis be funded? Who will provide the necessary care and attention that many autistic adults, including my son Conor, will need? Ms Davis describes the difficulty in drawing attention to the plight of autistic adults as compared to autistic children. She suggests that we all have a tendency to avoid contemplating the cute autistic child as a full grown adult and imagining the future. For Ms Davis, growing frailer with an incurable cancer, and the mother of a 22 year old son, the future is now, right now.

Ms Davis being the mother of an autistic adult male does not describe the challenges of caring for an autistic adult in the abstract, feel good nonsense of the joy of autism ideology. She describes some harsh realities:

A well-behaved, relatively high-functioning person such as my son could manage in an environment that has a ratio of three clients per staff member. But many autistic people require a one-to-one ratio. This is a serious hurdle, not least because of the high turnover rate among those who provide direct care, which stems in part from their low wages. Not everyone is temperamentally suited to this work. People with autism present myriad challenges: They can sometimes be violent, sometimes are self-abusive, suffer psychological meltdowns, or behave in many socially unacceptable ways, to say the least. Women, traditionally cast in the caregiver role, are at risk of greater physical harm when caring for autistic adults than for children. At expected rates, we will need to find an additional million caregivers, people who must have the right personal qualities to work with autistic individuals but who are willing and able to work for low wages. This is no small challenge. We not only must train people but also show that we value this work by paying them better.

Linda H. Davis calls for the discussion to begin now about how to care for autistic adults and she is right. She calls for such a discussion to take place in the United States. But we are also in dire need here in New Brunswick, and across Canada, of engaging in the same discussion. Such discussion is in fact long overdue.




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Washington Post Omits Historic Date, Important Information, From Autism Key Dates List

The Washington Post has published a list of Some Key Dates in Autism History. The list has an important omission and is inaccurate or misleading on some controversial assertions. The article also repeats, without qualification, some oft repeated official positions that are not entirely accurate or are subject to serious dispute.

1) 1987 Lovaas Study On Effectiveness of ABA

The
article, by Brittney Johnson, makes no mention of the publication in 1987 of the Lovaas study indicating that 90% of children substantially improved when utilizing Applied Behavior Analysis, compared to a control group with close to half attaining normal IQ and testing within the normal range on adaptive and social skills.


2) Alleged Thimerosal Removal

2000 In response to broad government concerns, vaccine makers remove thimerosal, a mercury-based preservative, from all routinely given childhood vaccines.


That statement is not entirely accurate. As stated by Dr. Robert Schecter, lead author of the recent California epidemiological study on rising autism incidence:

"Autism rates increased consistently ... throughout this period, despite the exclusion of mercury from nearly all childhood vaccines,"[Bold highlighting added -HLD]

As for Haley's argument that some children still might be getting some mercury from vaccines, Schechter said that could be true.

"I would not claim that children are getting no mercury from vaccines," Schechter said."

- Lexington Herald Leader, February 4, 2008


3) 2004 IOM Report - No credible evidence of a link between thimerosal and autism . . . or between the measles-mumps-rubella vaccine and autism.


2004: The Institute of Medicine, which advises the government on scientific matters, finds no credible evidence of a link between thimerosal and autism . . . or between the measles-mumps-rubella vaccine and autism.

The 2004 IOM report and the processes used in preparing it have been criticized; including recently by former NIH Head Dr. Bernadine Healy who stated that the IOM expressly discouraged research and investigation of a possible vaccine/thimerosal link to autism and that the IOM report authors did so because of fear of vaccination rejection by the general population. Dr. Healy's contentions appear to be supported by some of the IOM report statements at page 152.

4) Autism Spike

2007: The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports autism affects 1 in 150 children. Medical experts say the changed number reflects better detection, broader diagnostic criteria and increased public awareness -- not a spike in the disease.

Some medical experts attribute the spike entirely to diagnostic criteria change and increased public awareness ...... and some do not. Research is continuing into possible environmental causes of autism and their potential contribution to current rates of autism diagnosis.

5) Bettelheim's Refrigerator Mother Theory

1971: Eminent psychologist Bruno Bettelheim promotes the "refrigerator mother" theory, which holds that "cold," unurturing parents, especially moms, are to blame for autism.

The article describes Bettelheim as an eminent psychologist and makes no mention of the fact that his "theory" is totally discredited today .... or to the harm that it caused to families.

All in all, a less than sterling effort by Brittney Johnson and the Washington Post.

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