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Sunday, November 8th, 2009

Autism Vox 2008 in Review: June & July

December 31, 2008 by Kristina Chew, PhD  
Filed under Health

If Charlie’d had a younger sibling, would we have decided to participate in studies like this one at the University of Washington, as noted in the Seattle Post-Intelligencer:

Autism researchers at the University of Washington are seeking parents who will allow them to do brain scans of their infants.

………….

The UW scientists are looking for 84 six-month-old infants from California, Oregon, Washington, Montana, Idaho, Nevada and Alaska who have an older sibling who has been diagnosed with autism. They also need 34 infants with typically developing older brothers or sisters.

Each child will be scanned three times over two years.

Certainly I would have considered having a sibling of Charlie’s participate in such a study—-and then, after reading (wading) through so many studies, so much research, about or said to be related to autism over the years—-sometimes one wonders a bit about where it’s all going.

Some research from June: Are low birth weights and preterm births risk factors for autism? Does autism present diffrently in girls and women?

June was, too, the month that a certain female celebrity led, along with some others, a rally about “vaccine safety” in Washington, D.C.. Questions swirled about the extent to which said celebrity’s own child is recovered or not, or undiagnosed—-and perhaps this sort of discussion is beside the point, especially if you consider the notion of neurodiversity, according to which, just as we’ve come to understand that there’s diversity in terms of race, ethnicity, and gender, so we’re also starting to learn to think of diversity in terms of different ways of thinking, of different minds.

Autistic Self-Advocacy Network President Ari Ne’eman and I were interviewed for a Good Morning America segment on neurodiversity in early June—-a show which provoked quite a bit of discussion.

An autistic child was removed from an American Eagle flight in late June and, in July, a family with four children, one with autism and one with cerebral palsy, was told they were “too disruptive” to continue on a connecting flight from Phoenix to Seattle.

The NIMH put a study on chelation on hold, leading to considerations of whether the study should just be done to prove the efficacy, or lack thereof, of this alternative, and dangerous, treatment for autism. —–Another new diagnostic technique looked at whether one looks at the mouth or eyes of a person’s face. —- And findings about the rates of autism in Somali children in Minneapolis led to a lot of speculation and fears of some external “thing” causing such an increase. — Talk show host Micahel Savage launched a thousandfold of ire towards him for some, indeed, savage comments about autistic children and their parents.

Bringing the focus back to what we can do for autistic individuals in the here and now, it was reported that restraints are being used more and more in public schools

With the advent of summer, Jim and Charlie began another summer of bike rides, with Charlie more and more taking the lead and Jim devising newer, and longer courses. And July and the 4th of the month prompted more thoughts on the meaning of independence and also about why I don’t hold Charlie’s hand anymore (well, most of the time).

And please remember, with flowers and swings, Evan Kamida.

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Comments

2 Responses to “Autism Vox 2008 in Review: June & July”
  1. Club 166 says:

    Happy New Year’s to you, Jim, and Charlie!

    And congrats on being selected as one of the two autism related blogs for change.org.

    Joe

  2. Justthisguy says:

    Also congrats on the Change selection. You’re also nominated for a best Weblog award, as is John Donovan, of Castle Argghhh! Wow, two of my favorite people! You go vote for John, and I’ll now go exhort him to vote for you.

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