Aspies For Freedom

Full Version: Scientific American's autism article
You're currently viewing a stripped down version of our content. View the full version with proper formatting.
Just the usual stuff.  Online, it only shows you the first paragraph, unless you buy the article.  What I'd suggest is finding it in a book store and reading it there.

http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=autism-an-epidemic
It does not look promising...
A totally nonscientific response:  I think some of it is overdiagnosis and some is better identification. there is funding for ASD not for other diagnoses, so it is tempting to use that label for children who are socially disabled (follow their own agenda, not the teacher's).  Some parents really fight for this diagnosis so their child will get the help he or she legitimently need.  We are mandated to educate all children, so we are now stuck with the ones who used to conveniently (she says sarcastically) drop out of school (I am all for education).  But it also is probably us drowning in our own filth.  Our air, water, and food supply is full of  heavy metals and other scary contaniments.  Its a wonder that anybody is NT!!
Don't kid yourself that the air wasn't full of contaminants well before the modern age. Regular volcanic eruptions sent all kinds of poisonous chemicals into the air and surrounding environment, and standards of hygiene were usually quite revolting. Anyway, there's no proof that heavy metal poisoning or any other type of environmental poisoning causes autism. All that can be suggested is that getting these kinds of poisoning would sap a person's strength to cope with a pre-existing autistic condition.

I also think it wrong for kids to be forced to stay in academic programmes at school when it clear that they do not have the aptitude for them. The result is unhappy and disruptive kids. Far better to stream them into more practical courses.

It's true though that often a particular diagnosis is needed for kids to get the help they need. Funding is limited so a clear cut diagnosis is more likely to attract assistance than something tentative and unclear.
That article is from April 2007 - I actually bought that issue and I might still have it somewhere, although I cannot find it at the moment.
Thank you Autism Diva for this:

Quote:
An Epidemic?
From Scientific American MIND
Autism: An Epidemic?

A closer look at the statistics suggests something more than a simple
rise in incidence

IF THE FIGURE of "one in 166" has a familiar ring, perhaps that's because you recently heard it on a television commercial or read it in a magazine. According to widely publicized estimates, one in 166 is now the proportion of children who suffer from autism. This proportion is astonishingly high compared with the figure of one in 2,500 that autism researchers had accepted for decades. ...

Not surprisingly, these bewildering increases have led many researchers and educators to refer to an autism "epidemic." Representative Dan Burton of Indiana also declared in 2001 that "we have an epidemic on our hands." But what's really going on?

...

[...], investigators have turned to environmental factors for potential explanations. The causal agents proposed include antibiotics, viruses, allergies, enhanced opportunities for parents with mild autistic traits to meet and mate, and, in one recent study conducted by Cornell University researchers, elevated rates of television viewing in infants. Few of these explanations have been investigated systematically, and all remain speculative.


Problem Shots?

Yet one environmental culprit has received the lion's share of attention: vaccines. At first blush, vaccines would seem to make a plausible candidate for the source of the epidemic. The debilitating symptoms of autism typically become apparent shortly after age two, not long after infants have received vaccinations for a host of diseases. Indeed, many parents claim that their children developed autism shortly after receiving inoculations, either following a vaccine series for mumps, measles and rubella (German measles) — the so-called MMR vaccine — or following vaccines containing thimerosal, a preservative containing mercury.

Much of the hype surrounding a vaccine-autism link was fueled by a widely covered investigation of 12 children published in 1998 by British gastroenterologist Andrew Wakefield and his colleagues. The study revealed that symptoms of autism emerged shortly after the children received the MMR vaccine. (Ten of the 13 authors have since published a retraction of the article's conclusions.) Public interest in the vaccine-autism link was further stoked by the provocatively titled book Evidence of Harm (St. Martin's Press, 2005), written by investigative journalist David Kirby, which was featured in an extended segment on NBC's Meet the Press.

Yet recently published research has not been kind to the much ballyhooed vaccine-autism link. The results of several large American, European and Japanese studies demonstrate that although the rate of MMR vaccinations has remained constant or declined, the rate of autism diagnoses has soared. In addition, after the Danish government stopped administering thimerosal-bearing vaccines, the rates of autism continued to rise. These studies and others, summarized by the Institute of Medicine, suggest there is little evidence that vaccines cause autism. It is possible that vaccines trigger autism in a small subset of children, but if so that subset has yet to be identified.


Changing Criteria

Making matters more confusing, ample reason exists to question the very existence of the autism epidemic. Vaccines may be what scientists call an "explanation in search of a phenomenon." As University of Wisconsin-Madison psychologists Morton Ann Gernsbacher and H. Hill Goldsmith and University of Montreal researcher Michelle Dawson noted in a 2005 review, there is an often overlooked alternative explanation for the epidemic: changes in diagnostic practices. Over time the criteria for a diagnosis of autism have loosened, resulting in the labeling of substantially more mildly afflicted individuals as autistic.

Indeed, the 1980 version of the American Psychiatric Association's diagnostic manual (DSM-III) required individuals to meet six of six criteria for an autism diagnosis. In contrast, the 1994 version (DSM-IV), which is currently in use, requires individuals to meet any eight of 16 criteria. Moreover, whereas DSM-III contained only two diagnoses relevant to autism, the DSM-IV contains five such diagnoses, including Asperger's syndrome, which most researchers regard as a high-functioning variant of autism.

Legal changes may also be playing a significant role. As Gernsbacher and her colleagues noted, an amended version of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), passed by Congress in 1991, required school districts to provide precise counts of children with disabilities. IDEA resulted in sharp surges in the reported numbers of children with autism. Nevertheless, these numbers are not based on careful diagnoses of autism or on representative samples of the population. As a consequence, researchers who rely on "administrative-based estimates," which come from government data submitted by schools, will arrive at misleading conclusions about autism's prevalence. They must instead rely on "population-based estimates," which are developed from statistically reliable and representative surveys of autism's occurrence in the general population.

Further contributing to the reported increase may be the "Rain Man Effect," the public's increased familiarity with autism following the 1988 Academy Award-winning film starring Dustin Hoffman and Tom Cruise.


Numbers Analyzed

Two recent studies buttress assertions that the autism epidemic may be more illusory than real. First, in 2005 psychiatrist Suniti Chakrabarti of the Child Development Center in Stafford, England, and psychiatrist Eric Fombonne of McGill University conducted an investigation that used rigorous population-based estimates to track the prevalence of autism diagnoses from 1992 to 1998 in a sample of more than 10,000 children in the same area of England. They found no support for a change in prevalence, suggesting that when researchers maintain the same criteria for autism, the rates of diagnosis do not change over time.

Second, a 2006 article by University of Wisconsin-Madison psychologist Paul Shattuck cited "diagnostic substitution": as the rates of the autism diagnosis increased from 1994 to 2003, the rates of diagnoses of mental retardation and learning disabilities decreased. This finding raises the possibility that the overall "pool" of children with autismlike features has remained constant but that the specific diagnoses within this pool have swapped places.

It is still too early to exclude the possibility that autism's prevalence is growing, but it is unlikely that it is growing at anywhere near the rate many have suggested. As the late Eastern Michigan University sociologist Marcello Truzzi once said, extraordinary claims require extraordinary proof. The claim of an enormous epidemic of autism diagnoses is indeed extraordinary. Yet the evidence in support of this claim leaves much to be desired.

__________________________

That's pretty nice coverage of the non-epidemic by Scientific American MIND. More could have been said. The word "slime" could have been inserted somewhere near the mention of David Kirby's book to good effect. The fact that litigant parent groups (no doubt on the advice of some legal-weasels) have spent hundreds of thousands of dollars to push their view of autism into the media by way of paid PR firms using lots of disinformative press releases and then there's the whole manipulation of politicians and by politicians thing... but maybe they had a word limit to stick to.

Here is a link to a more complete article.  http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=is-t...m-epidemic

The article ends with "Yet the evidence for this claim leaves much to be desired." about the hysteria over the "autism epidemic".
Maybe I accidentally linked to an older article, but I did see one in a paper copy of SciAm yesterday in a bookstore.  Possible they just forgot to pull an old issue from the shelf, but I doubt it.

Janet Wrote:
A totally nonscientific response:  I think some of it is overdiagnosis and some is better identification. there is funding for ASD not for other diagnoses, so it is tempting to use that label for children who are socially disabled (follow their own agenda, not the teacher's).  Some parents really fight for this diagnosis so their child will get the help he or she legitimently need.  We are mandated to educate all children, so we are now stuck with the ones who used to conveniently (she says sarcastically) drop out of school (I am all for education).  But it also is probably us drowning in our own filth.  Our air, water, and food supply is full of  heavy metals and other scary contaniments.  Its a wonder that anybody is NT!!


You actually believe the "environmental pollutants cause autism" theory...?  *sigh*

[/quote]
You actually believe the "environmental pollutants cause autism" theory...?  *sigh*
[/quote]

I seriously doubt that any one thing can cause autism.  It is complex and I never met two people with this diagnosis who were alike.  I think lots of things might contribute to it.  It is unreasonable to say the world has not increased pollutents.  Pllutents haVE INCREASED AND ARE MORE VARIED - TAKE plasics for example.  *sigh* right back atcha!

Janet Wrote:
I seriously doubt that any one thing can cause autism.  It is complex and I never met two people with this diagnosis who were alike.  I


Well if you can use AFF as a reference point for what "most Aspies are like," then yes many on here are alike--most are highly intellectual and/or academic.  And I am not.  *sigh again*

Hmph. What's so much better about being intellectual, than not? Who says you have to be a certain way?--I sure don't. Just because you are an Aspie doesn't mean you have to stuff yourself into an Aspie stereotype--even a positive Aspie stereotype.
Different causes isn't necessarily what causes different personalities...
This sounds like a short article published a while ago has been recycled in some special issue of the magazine. I have a whole list of good articles about the question of the so-called "autism epidemic" on my blog somewhere.

Batman55 Wrote:

Well if you can use AFF as a reference point for what "most Aspies are like," then yes many on here are alike--most are highly intellectual and/or academic.  And I am not.  *sigh again*


bullshit!! (can I say that here??)

Reference URL's