Slashdot Mirror


Continued Rise In Autism Diagnoses Puzzles Researchers, Galvanizes Advocates

sciencehabit (1205606) writes "The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has raised eyebrows, and concern among current and prospective parents, with a new report documenting that the rate of autism spectrum disorder diagnosis in the United States jumped 30% between 2008 and 2010, from one in 88 to one in 68 children. CDC officials don't know, however, whether the startling increase is due to skyrocketing rates of the disorder or more sensitive screening, or a combination of both."

11 of 558 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Or endless 'vaccinations' by DarwinSurvivor · · Score: 5, Informative

    Please stop spreading the vaccine-autism bullshit. It's been consistently debunked and was only ever supported by a single flawed study that a celebrity took charge of spreading to scare parents out of vaccinating their children.

  2. Re:really? really. by king+neckbeard · · Score: 5, Informative

    Actually, the article states about half of those diagnosed have average or above average intelligence. Thus, autism is becoming less and less about intelligence and more about just having different behavior. I think this will likely be a great thing, as it will help separate the conflation of autism with mental retardation. This will benefit everyone across the spectrum of intelligence, and along the spectrum of what we consider severity for autism.

    --
    This is my signature. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
  3. Re: Clearly vaccination is to blame! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    Not knowing what causes autism and yet knowing beyond reasonable doubt that vaccines don't is entirely consistent with all the medical evidence. Confusing these facts does not demonstrate that medical science is wrong.

  4. Re:really? really. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    pure bollocks.

    It's nothing to do with iq or lazyness, go fucking read some proper information instead of sprouting shit!

    A good many autistics are much more intelligent and hard working than you will ever be.

  5. Re: Clearly vaccination is to blame! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    They aren't. The question as to whether vaccines are related to autism has been heavily studied. We may not know what causes it, but we are quite certain as to the fact that vaccines do not. One can exclude a possibility without settling on an answer, you know. You may never figure out who was stealing from your cookie jar, but you can still be certain it wasn't Richard Nixon.

  6. Re: Clearly vaccination is to blame! by Bengie · · Score: 4, Informative

    Doctors will NEVER admit they're wrong.

    And you're right, they don't know what causes it, why are they so quick to say the vaccines aren't connected?

    "Are so quick"? Several different Universities have done research on the subject over many years and all came to the same conclusion, Autism rates are the same in people who get vaccines as people who don't.

  7. Re: Clearly vaccination is to blame! by naasking · · Score: 4, Informative

    And you're right, they don't know what causes it, why are they so quick to say the vaccines aren't connected?

    Is this a serious question? There was one study which suggested a link (Wakefield). This study's data was fabricated, and was later retracted Wakefield's license was revoked. There were then a flurry of studies showing no link between vaccines and autism. You really think that's "quick to say"?

  8. Re:Education funding and excessive medicallisation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Informative

    Despite clear evidence the DNA in your family tree is rotten, you went ahead and had children anyway. Good job, asshole.

  9. Re:Medicalizing Normality by s0nicfreak · · Score: 1, Informative

    My son is autistic. You're confusing low-functioning autism with all autism. You're also assuming that a low-functioning autistic can not function once given the proper tools (for example, he may not be able to say "I need to eat" nor drive to the grocery store, but give him an app that lets him order food whenever he needs to eat and he can live on his own just fine).

  10. Over-simplification ftw! by BenBoy · · Score: 3, Informative

    LMAO, you don't know how evolution works, do you? What possible advantage could autism provide, when it renders most afflicted persons unsociable and awkward and therefore highly unlikely to pass on their genes?

    LMAO, you don't know how evolution works, do you? What possible advantage could sickle-cell anemia provide, when it renders most afflicted persons breathless and weak and prematurely dead and therefore highly unlikely to pass on their genes? The real story here is probably more complicated than this, but it's a *hell* of a lot more complicated than that.

  11. Re:Medicalizing Normality by BobMcD · · Score: 5, Informative

    My youngest son has high-functioning autism with pdd. From my point of view, you're both right and wrong (in that extremely insensitive way only an ignorant person can be.) So let me reflect.

    You're right - there is a 'craze'. It involves things like throwing Risperdal and/or non-gluten-casein diets at a problem that science can't even define, let alone treat. Jenny McArthy's book, all that crap. It is crap, you're right about that. It is the same as all infant science - as much voodoo as fact. But that goes for a lot of medicine these days, so let's not judge too harshly.

    You're wrong (in a fuck-you-generating way) that this is 'just' a craze. My son is a very different type of human. In fact this is how we break in new care givers: "Imagine a space craft landed and dropped off one of their children. Everything he does is normal on his home planet, and most of the things we do are weird and strange to him. That's Scott."

    He can't really relate to people in a natural way. Eye contact is poison. He mixes up the concepts of 'love' and 'need' (he'll be the first to tell you he 'loves to fart', for example.) He'll probably never have a 'normal job', but could work in a specialized environment, etc.

    There are upsides, too. Some of them are basically superpowers. For example, if he saw a calendar at any time during his life, he remembers it forever. So you can ask him, 'what was the Wednesday before April 7th, 2006' and he'll tell you. I have no idea how useful this would be to anyone, but it's still pretty remarkable. His circadian rhythms are pretty much infallible. Stuff like that.

    In short, he's unique enough to have a 'thing' that deserves a name. The existence of the 'craze' doesn't invalidate the 'thing'.

    It isn't all bad