Newsvine
  • Welcome
  • Help
  • Report Bug
  • Conversation Tracker
  • Your Column
  • Replies
  • Friends
Type Comments Since You Last CheckedArticle Source Last Checked Stop Tracking All Clear Tracking All
advertisement
Log In | Register
Close the Login Panel
Existing users log in below. New users please register for a free account.

New Users:

Existing Users:

E-Mail:
Password:
Forgot Password?
Please enter the e-mail address or domain name you registered with:
E-Mail/Domain:
Back to Login
Log Out
  • Top News
  • Local News
  • World
  • U.S.
  • Sports
  • Politics
  • Tech
  • Entertainment
  • Science
  • Business
  • Health
  • Odd News
  • More
    • Arts
    • Education
    • Fashion
    • History
    • Home & Garden
    • Religion
    • Travel
    • Environment
What is Newsvine?

Updated continuously by citizens like you, Newsvine is an instant reflection of what the world is talking about at any given moment.

Get a Free Account
Help
Fun Stuff
  • Leaderboard
  • E-Mail Alerts
  • Top of the Vine
  • Newsvine Live
  • Newsvine Archives
  • The Greenhouse
  • Recommended Articles
  • Newsvine Tools
  • Wall of Vineness
Put a Seed Newsvine link on your own site
{"contentId":"1072382","authorDomain":"ap-360"}

Autism Epidemic May Be All in the Label

Sun Nov 4, 2007 9:30 AM EST
health, autism, epidemic, eddie-scheuplein, ryan-massey
Mike Stobbe, AP Medical Writer
advertisement

ATLANTA — A few decades ago, people probably would have said kids like Ryan Massey and Eddie Scheuplein were just odd. Or difficult.

Both boys are bright. But Ryan, 11, is hyper and prone to angry outbursts, sometimes trying to strangle another kid in his class who annoys him. Eddie, 7, has a strange habit of sticking his shirt in his mouth and sucking on it.

Both were diagnosed with a form of autism. And it's partly because of children like them that autism appears to be skyrocketing: In the latest estimate, as many as one in 150 children have some form of this disorder. Groups advocating more research money call autism "the fastest-growing developmental disability in the United States."

Indeed, doctors are concerned there are even more cases out there, unrecognized: The American Academy of Pediatrics last week stressed the importance of screening every kid — twice — for autism by age 2.

But many experts believe these unsociable behaviors were just about as common 30 or 40 years ago. The recent explosion of cases appears to be mostly caused by a surge in special education services for autistic children, and by a corresponding shift in what doctors call autism.

Autism has always been diagnosed by making judgments about a child's behavior; there are no blood or biologic tests. For decades, the diagnosis was given only to kids with severe language and social impairments and unusual, repetitious behaviors.

Many children with severe autism hit themselves or others, don't speak and don't make eye contact.

Blake Dees, a 19-year-old from Suwanee, Ga., falls into that group. For the past eight years, he has been in a day program with intense services, but he still doesn't talk, he's not toilet-trained, and he has a history of trying to eat anything — even broken glass.

But he's not a typical case.

In the 1990s, the autism umbrella expanded, and autism is now shorthand for a group of milder, related conditions, known as "autism spectrum disorders."

The spectrum includes Asperger's syndrome and something called PDD-NOS (for Pervasive Developmental Disorder-Not Otherwise Specified). Some support groups report more than half of their families fall into these categories, but there is no commonly accepted scientific breakdown.

Gradually, there have been changes in parents' own perception of autism, the autism services schools provide, and the care that insurers pay for, experts say.

Eddie, of Buford, Ga., was initially diagnosed with obsessive-compulsive disorder, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and other conditions. But the services he got in school were not very helpful.

His mother, Michelle, said a diagnosis of autism brought occupational therapy and other, better services.

"I do have to admit I almost like the idea of having the autistic label, at least over the other labels, because there's more help out there for you," said Scheuplein.

"The truth is there's a powerful incentive for physicians and schools to classify children in a way that gets services," said Dr. Edwin Trevathan of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Many with Asperger's and PDD-NOS succeed in school and do not — at first glance — have much in common with children like Blake Dees.

At a recent gathering of families with Asperger's children in the Atlanta area, parents told almost comical stories about kids who frequently pick their noses, douse food in ketchup or wear the same shirt day after day.

Such a frank, humorous exchange was once a rarity. Doctors for many years believed in the "refrigerator mom" theory, which held that autism was the result of being raised by a cold, unloving mother. The theory became discredited, but was difficult to dislodge from the popular conscience.

Even in the early 1980s, some parents were more comfortable with a diagnosis of mental retardation than autism, said Trevathan, director of the CDC's National Center on Birth Defects and Developmental Disabilities.

Today, parents are more likely to cringe at a diagnosis of mental retardation, which is sometimes equated to a feeble-mindedness and may obscure a child's potential.

And increasingly, professionals frown at the term: The special education journal Mental Retardation this year changed its name to Intellectual & Developmental Disabilities.

The editor said that "mentally retarded" is becoming passe and demeaning, much like the terms idiot, imbecile and moron — once used by doctors to describe varying degrees of mental retardation.

In contrast, autism has become culturally acceptable — and a ticket to a larger range of school services and accommodations.

In 1990, Congress added the word "autism" as a separate disability category to a federal law that guarantees special education services, and Education Department regulations have included a separate definition of autism since 1992.

Before that, children with autism were counted under other disabling conditions, such as mental retardation, said Jim Bradshaw, an education department spokesman.

The Social Security Administration also broadened its definition of disability to include spectrum disorders, like Asperger's.

Something else changed: The development of new stimulants and other medicines may have encouraged doctors to make diagnoses with the idea of treating them with these drugs.

Perception of the size of the problem changed, too.

Fourteen years ago, only 1 in 10,000 children were diagnosed with it. Prevalence estimates gradually rose to the current government estimate of one in 150.

That increase has been mirrored in school districts. Gwinnett County Public Schools — Georgia's largest school system — had eight classrooms for teaching autistic youngsters 13 years ago; today there are 180.

Some researchers suggest that as autism spectrum diagnoses have gone up, diagnoses of mild mental retardation have fallen.

U.S. Department of Education data show that the number of students with autism rose steadily, from about 42,500 in 1997 to nearly 225,000 in 2006. Meanwhile, the number of students counted as mentally retarded declined from about 603,000 to about 523,000.

CDC scientists believe education numbers are misleading, because they reflect only how kids are categorized for services. They say there's no clear evidence doctors are substituting one diagnosis for the other.

Some parents believe environmental factors — ranging from a preservative in vaccines to contaminants in food or water — may be important contributors. (The last doses of early childhood vaccines containing the preservative thimerosal expired in 2002, although some children's flu shots still contain it.)

Dr. Gary Goldstein, scientific adviser to the national advocacy group Autism Speaks, said the explanation for the rising autism prevalence is probably complex. Labeling and diagnosing probably play a role, as do genetics, but he believes the increase surpasses those two explanations.

"I'm seeing more children with autism than I ever would have expected to see," said Goldstein, who is chief executive of the Kennedy Krieger Institute, a treatment center for pediatric developmental disabilities in Baltimore.

Autism Speaks budgets more than $4 million each year to research the causes of autism, and about 90 percent of that has gone to genetics research. But organization officials recently have been talking about changing that mix, and spending as much as 50 percent of that money on potential environmental triggers, Goldstein said.

Whether it's because of genes or the environment (or both), autism has hit the Massey family hard. Chuck and Julia Massey, of Dacula, Ga., have three sons with Asperger's.

The youngest, Ryan, was first diagnosed after he was slow to develop speaking ability. His brothers — Trevor, 14, and Morgan, 16 — had learning and behavior problems and were later diagnosed with Asperger's, too.

All got special education services and were treated with medications. Morgan has improved, or matured, or both, and is now a social kid in mainstream classes at a Gwinnett County high school. Trevor seems to be making the same transition, his mother said.

Ryan is the most extreme. He still has uncontrollable tantrums and must attend an Asperger's-only sixth-grade classroom that teaches social skills along with traditional subjects.

In a recent interview at the family's home, Ryan acknowledged he still has anger control issues. One of the three other students in his class is particularly irritating. Ryan said the way he reacts is by "grabbing his throat."

But on this night, Ryan was calm. He described himself as happy, and paced the room telling jokes, like a nervous stand-up comedian. ("Why didn't the skeleton go to the party? He didn't have the guts," he said, eyes fixed on his audience.)

Having three Asperger's boys under one roof has at times been very intense, Massey said, noting a replaced dining room window.

Ryan acknowledged it's been educational living in a house full of Asperger's kids. Asked to name something he's learned from his brothers, he replied, "Swears."

___

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention autism information:

http://www.cdc.gov/ncbddd/autism/

American Academy of Pediatrics autism reports:

http://www.aap.org/advocacy/releases/oct07autism.htm

© 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Related Articles
Autism 'epidemic' may be all in the label; Behaviors were as common years ago, but definition, diagnosis have shiftedmsnbc.comSun Nov 40Comments
Film on autism offers an upbeat takedailyprogress.comFri Nov 20Comments
{"contentId":"1072382","authorDomain":"ap-360"}
  • Enjoy this article? Help vote it up the 'Vine.

Back To Top | Front Page

Published to:

  • Mike Stobbe's Column, All of Newsvine
  • Groups: Children of Autism
  • Regions: United States , Atlanta
  • Public Discussion (4)
{"commentId":1171013,"authorDomain":"woodenu"}
Wooden U. Lykteneau

This guy is a @!$%#ing idiot and clearly has an agenda.

{"commentId":1171013,"threadId":"173602","contentId":"1072382","authorDomain":"woodenu"}
    Reply#1 - Fri Nov 9, 2007 8:11 AM EST
    {"commentId":1495947,"authorDomain":"Sem0lina"}
    Sem0l1na

    Labeling can't account for an order of magnitude change in the autism rate. Even labeling plus the elusive gene don't account for an order of magnitude change.. 1 in 10 thousand in 1970 to 1 in 150 in 2006.

    In my entire K-12 experience, and I changed schools every few years as my parents traveled down the East Coast in the US, I never once saw a self-contained autistic classroom in any school I attended. Nor did I see any child with severe autism at school, in my neighborhood, or during our frequent travels outside the US.

    Today school districts are drowning in cases of not just Aspergers, but severe autism, the hand-flapping, head-banging, feces-smearing kids who I never saw during my entire childhood and adulthood up until about 10 years ago. These kids were not in any of the major cities where I have lived.

    As far as numbers for mental retardation go, many chromosomal mutations can be detected in-utero, such as the one that causes Downs Syndrome. Many of the chromosome mutations detected through amniocentesis end up as terminated (aborted) pregnancies. Given this fact, it is not surprising that the rates of mental retardation diagnoses are going down in school-aged children.

    Diagnostic swapping does not account for an order of magnitude change in the autism rate.

    {"commentId":1495947,"threadId":"173602","contentId":"1072382","authorDomain":"Sem0lina"}
    • 1 vote
    Reply#2 - Fri Feb 22, 2008 3:08 AM EST
    {"commentId":2366098,"authorDomain":"beff79"}
    DAN!-momma

    I do agree that "autism" as we know it now can be caused by many different things that can mimic true genetic autism. I believe our son was wrongly diagnosed with autism when what he really has/had is a fungal infection in his bowel, viral overload, antibiotic overload, a genetic disorder, and exposure to toxins that caused him to severely regress and have almost every symptom of autism at the height of his illness...and he was one of the lucky ones! And yes we have the test results to prove all of this for you doubters out there.

    The sad thing is that people like me are hounded for refusing vaccines and unneccessary antibiotics. One of these days, the mainstream public will finally realize what we are saying and see the light. Clean up and drastically reduce the garbage we force our kids to inject or ingest.

    Our son is nearly recovered and is progressing nicely. I think most of these kids are just profoundly ill from vaccines and other toxins so maybe this brand of "recoverable" autism should be called just that...sounds better than my-baby-was-the-drug-companies-guinea-pig--itis! He is going to have to fight his battle for years to come and possibly his whole life all because I did not question his doctors judgement. So the Michael Savages can say what they want but I know that our sons illness has nothing to do with him being a brat...thats just sad and actually hurtful to kids like mine. BTW we do not get any government support:)

    {"commentId":2366098,"threadId":"173602","contentId":"1072382","authorDomain":"beff79"}
      Reply#3 - Mon Aug 4, 2008 10:16 PM EDT
      {"commentId":2366683,"authorDomain":"Sem0lina"}
      Sem0l1na

      U.S. Department of Education data show that the number of students with autism rose steadily, from about 42,500 in 1997 to nearly 225,000 in 2006. Meanwhile, the number of students counted as mentally retarded declined from about 603,000 to about 523,000.

      Many forms of mental retardation are genetically detectable. Abortion and amniocentesis can explain a real decline in mental retardation in the population of the US.

      @DANI mom - I hear you. My son had allergy testing done (Blood and skin prick/both types of tests) on a huge panel of food allergens when he was about three and a half years old. He was absolutely allergic to every single food, both those he'd eaten, and those he'd NEVER eaten - by both blood and skin testing.

      Meanwhile he eats copious quantities of some of those foods, such as peanut butter, daily, which should have driven him into anaphylaxis and killed him years ago. My explanation is increased intestinal permeability, with partially digested peptides migrating through the intestinal walls and into the bloodstream, where they cause the immune system to react as if they are allergens, and creating antibodies against all these food peptides.

      What tests did you have performed?? I have considered DAN but never tried it out. I've also considered chelation, but again, I haven't actually tried it.

      {"commentId":2366683,"threadId":"173602","contentId":"1072382","authorDomain":"Sem0lina"}
        Reply#4 - Mon Aug 4, 2008 11:42 PM EDT
        {"canLink":false,"threadId":"173602","isPrivate":false}
        Leave a Comment:
        You're in Easy Mode. If you prefer, you can use XHTML Mode instead.
        You're in XHTML Mode. If you prefer, you can use Easy Mode instead.
        (XHTML tags allowed - a,b,blockquote,br,code,dd,dl,dt,del,em,h2,h3,h4,i,ins,li,ol,p,pre,q,strong,ul)
        Newsvine Privacy Statement
        As a new user, you may notice a few temporary content restrictions. Click here for more info.
        {"threadId":"173602","contentId":"1072382"}
        Start TrackingStart Tracking
        Stop TrackingStop Tracking
        Back To Top | Front Page
        FUN STUFF:
        • Leaderboard |
        • E-Mail Alerts |
        • Top of the Vine |
        • Newsvine Live |
        • Newsvine Archives |
        • The Greenhouse |
        • Newsvine Tools
        COMPANY STUFF:
        • Code of Honor |
        • Company Info |
        • Contact Us |
        • Jobs |
        • User Agreement |
        • Privacy Policy
        LEGAL STUFF:
        • © 2005-2010 Newsvine, Inc. |
        • Newsvine® is a registered trademark of Newsvine, Inc. |
        • Newsvine is a property of msnbc.com