Autism Vox 2008 in Review: August-December

Happy 2009!

We’re leaving tonight on the red-eye to go back from the Bay Area to New Jersey so, in the interest of being able to spend more time in the California sunshine with my guys and my parents, and since it is, indeed, 2009, a few more highlights from 2008.

August means one thing in my household—-two weeks at the beach, at the Jersey Shore. Not surprisingly, it was still impossible to avoid talk about vaccines. A new clinical trial of the GFCF diet was announced. While people have strong disagreements about the “right” of parents to vaccinate or not, everyone agreed that the use of “retard” in the movie Tropic Thunder was unncessary.

Charlie started middle school in September and, by October, he was deep into middle school blues, and Jim and I found ourselves back into the old familiar advocacy mode, including meetings with teachers present and past, Charlie’s case manager, ABA consultants, school district administrators (but not, yet, “legal counsel” of the sort this family in Montgomery County (Virginia) has had to take).

Also in September: A 13-year-old autistic boy treaded water for 15 hours off the coast of Volusia County in Florida, until he was found the next day.

Another study showed that the MMR vaccine does not cause autism.

And, with Election Day nearing, the choice of Alaska governor Sarah Palin—whose youngest son, Trig, has Down Syndrome—-as Senator John McCain’s running mate got the (Special Needs) Mommy Wars going again.

In October, I (former warrior mom that I am) was on a Science Blogs book club panel writing about a newly published book, I get a lot of hate mail”: Autism’s False Prophets by Paul Offit. (And I’ve not been feeling that I need beware Jenny McCarthy and her so-called angry mom-mob; I know that someone’s watching over me.)

More to the point than “debates” about vaccines and autism was the passage of the mental health parity bill.

And then, in the middle of October, was the McCain-Obama debate in which McCain apparently confused Down Syndrome and autism, and after which I was interviwed on Newsweek about the candidates.

Around the same time, Denis Leary did a Michael Savage, Charlie seemed to grow taller every week, and David Kirby exonerated thimerosal, and as quickly said he hadn’t.

November brought a new theory about autism and genetics, another suggestion for identifying autism in infants (”strange play“), and more speculation about autism and schizophrenia as the same. A mandatory autism registry was proposed in New Jersey; researchers began to look for autism’s causes at home; and I attended the November 21st meeting of the Interagency Autism Coordinating Committee (IACC), at which the draft of the Strategic Plan was discussed.

December, this past month, began with Autism Twitter Day, organized by Bonnie Sayers; an exchange about some dangerous ideas about autism, and some events concerning autistic rights, from an autistic girl in Wisconsin becoming a Brownie after being asked not to return to a special needs Brownie troop, to calls for the inclusion of autistic individuals on the boards of autism organizations. (This letter states why.)

And some final thoughts as 2008 ended: What would you like to see in autism legislation? (Something besides insurance coverage for specific therapies.) And isn’t it time for vaccine talk detox? (Yes.)

So farewell to 2008 and onward into the new year, which I suspect holds some more changes all the time for Charlie, and which holds a big one for me, too—-but more on that tomorrow, once we’re back home in Jersey.

Autism Vox 2008 in Review: April

A constant theme in 2008 was the rebranding of autism, as Orac at Respectful Insolence referred to how the likes of David Kirby have been constantly saying that “autism isn’t autism”—-it’s “mercury poisoning,” “vaccine-aggravated mitochondrial disorder,” “mercury-induced neurological disorder,” etc., etc.

(April being Autism Awareness Month—-does your child know about this—let’s not get into what such “rebranding” would do to the month…….)

The notorious Judge Rotenburg Center in Canton, Massachusetts uses electroshock “treatment” on some its residents, some of whom are autistic. In April, one of its staff was charged with rape, assault, and battery of another staff member—-more about the very, very questionable practices at the JRC is noted here.

Dr. Andrew Wakefield can be said to be the figure who set in motion the claims of a link between the MMR vaccine and autism. He is currently being charged with alleged violations of medical ethics by the General Medical Council in the UK. At a hearing in April, Dr. Wakefield noted that he is “‘perfectly willing to accept [his] understanding was wrong.’”—- Also on the legal front: 2008 saw a version of “vaccine litigation subpoenagate,” with Neurodiversity blogger Kathleen Seidel successfully quashing a subpoena issued to her by vaccine litigation lawyer Clifford Shoemaker, and Dr. Marie McCormick also issued a subpoena.

More about the presidential candidates’ views on autism became apparent, especially those of Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton, and, yes, on vaccines—-and as to why vaccines, and topics like the so-called “autism epidemic,” continue to be discussed, seems to be a sign of at least a little paranoia and politicking……….

Autism Vox 2008 in Review: February

February brought on winter doldrums and also a topic that came to dominate 2008, the presidential election, starting with a post on the candidates’ views on autism prior to Super Tuesday on February 5th.

There was more evidence refuting the vaccine-autism link—and specifically the MMR vaccine—from the Archives of Disease in Childhood. We need to get the word out about the evidence that there is no link, as it’s been reported that more parents are choosing not to vaccinate their children, because they fear that vaccines or something in vaccines might cause autism. And measles cases have been on the rise in 2008, with 5 cases reported in San Diego (and soon 11 cases) in mid-February.

In the UK, the National Autistic Society began another phase of its Think Differently about autism campaign, with a focus on autistic adults and the message “I Exist.” The need for this campaign was more than made apparent on hearing comments about autistic children as “retards” made by Adam Jasinski, a contestant on CBS’ Big Brother TV show.

After an article in Wired magazine featuring Amanda Baggs and Michelle Dawson, questions about autism as disease/disability/difference led to discussion (of a rather heated nature, at times).

And then, on February 28th, then-presidential-candidates Senator John McCain linked the rise in autism cases to mercury in vaccines…………………

“A little checking goes a long way”

December 27, 2008 by Kristina Chew, PhD  
Filed under Health, Junk Science, Science, Vaccines

So says Ellen Raphael, UK director of Sense About Science, regarding the “bad science tips” made by various celebrities and public figures (from Tom Cruise on psychiatry to, yes, President-Elect Barack Obama on vaccines and autism).

Here’s hoping that they’ll all take a New Year’s resolution to do a little fact-checking, or at least web-surfing, before offering those tips in 2009.

Obama’s New Secretary of Education

December 16, 2008 by Kristina Chew, PhD  
Filed under Education, Politics

Arne Duncan, the superintendent of the Chicago school system, has been chosen as the new Secretary of Education by President-Elect Barack Obama, as noted yesterday in EdWeek and on the New York Times’ The Caucus blog. From EdWeek:

As Chicago schools CEO, Duncan tapped a panel to craft curriculum-based assessments to guide teaching, bolstered spending on anti-violence prevention measures, and tested out a program allowing teachers to evaluate one another.

Duncan supports the basic framework of the No Child Left Behind Act. In testimony before a congressional committee in 2006, he called on lawmakers to “maintain the law’s high expectations and accountability” but to amend the law “to give schools, districts, and states the maximum amount of flexibility possible.”

Any thoughts about the new Secretary’s position on, and knowledge about, special education in general, and autism in particular?

Top Posts from the Past Two Weeks

Saying “a lot happened” in the past two weeks kind of seems like an understatement.

Slate’s Suggestion to Obama: Choose a Cabinet of Geniuses

November 16, 2008 by Kristina Chew, PhD  
Filed under Politics

According to the November 15th Slate, Barack Obama needs to choose a cabinet of really smart genius types—that is, with those who are “brilliant—albeit prickly, semi-autistic, and egomaniacal—thinkers”:

The issue starts at the Treasury Department, where the best choice would be former Clinton Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers. Summers is the outstanding international economist of his generation, someone whose brilliance is immediately evident in any conversation. …………….

Summers can also be arrogant and politically incorrect. He sometimes does a poor job hiding his contempt for lesser intellects and loves to play the intellectual provocateur. Socially, he can be a bit autistic. But these are the defects of a superior mind, and they are a small price to pay for getting the person most likely to maximize our chances of avoiding a full-scale global depression.
…….
For Education, [Obama] might choose Joel Klein, the chancellor of the New York City school system. Klein has not gone through life making friends, but he has shown himself an unusually shrewd and committed thinker about educational management and reform. Better yet, what about getting Bill Gates to tackle the problem?

If the President-elect takes up Slate’s suggestions, get ready for quips about the genius bar on the Potomac………..

Looks Like the Special Needs Mommy Wars Aren’t Over

November 13, 2008 by Kristina Chew, PhD  
Filed under Parenting, Politics

So, now that “a certain event last week has come and gone,” a question courtesy of Tina Brown in The Daily Beast (and thanks to Working Dad by Paul Nyhan):

Is Sarah Palin a potential leader for working moms?

And, more particularly and pertaining more to this blog, is she a leader—a model—for special needs mothers?

According to Brown:

…..[Palin] could play a valuable leadership role—right now—by being honest about and sharing what she really does know about: combining healthy ambition with mothering five kids. Confronting the pain she must have felt—and, even I dare to suggest, the guilt she won’t allow is there—at her own parental oversight when her teenage daughter got pregnant. Struggling with that other decision she has also blown off as an easy call: to continue with her own late-in-life pregnancy when she found she would give birth to a Down syndrome baby. (And it was a decision, “pro-life” platitudes notwithstanding.)

Looks like they’ll be some more skirmishes ahead in the Special Needs Mommy Wars. Prior to the election, Palin said that she’d be an advocate for “families who have special needs and children with special needs”—–I guess we shall see.

It Never Rains But It Pours: What a Week

What a week—–I guess that is kind of an understatement. There was a new, and frustratingly improbable theory of autism causation: Rain. The Times Online reminds us that, as has often been said, a correlation does not mean you’ve got a cause and notes that there’s indeed doubt as to “whether the paper deserved to be published and reported.” The line of reasoning followed by the paper’s author, Michael Waldman of the Johnson School at Cornell University is that living in a wetter climate leads children to stay inside more, and to be exposed to less sunlight and so produce less Vitamin D, and to spend more time on indoor activities such as watching TV—and to become autisitic.

Theorizing that TV might cause autism was the topic of an earlier paper by Prof. Waldman that relied as much on correlations and associations. I wrote to Prof. Waldman about his TV-autism theory back in October of 2006. The TV theory made especially little sense in our household because we don’t have a TV and, when we did, Charlie was not one to watch it, beyond certain favorite videos. Indeed, Charlie’s preferred activity is to be outside, pacing or roaming, preferably on a day with a clear blue sky and lots of sunshine. He is, though, pretty tolerant of rain and when it’s not too heavy—misting—-he doesn’t seem to care at all. This is obviously a correlation, but I’d say he’s more focused and calmed and at ease for being outside (mist or rain).

Anyways, as we have no TV, we weren’t able to sit in front of it to watch the results of the US Presidential election pour in (I did not mean that as a pun) on Tuesday night. Jim went to the gym and watched TV there and I flitted around between every major news website I could think of; Charlie was sound asleep, after a good day at school, a log walk (in misty conditions), and a potentially disappointing visit to the grocery store because they’d lost their power and almost all refrigerated and frozen items had had to be tossed, and Charlie was unable to find the usual items (vegetarian egg rolls and mini carrots, among others) that he favors.

You know what happened in the election, and then before you know it there’s been a brouhaha about the suggestion that Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., might be considered to head the EPA—-seems not a week can go by without a certain theory of autism causation pushing its way into the public discussion (and onto this blog). Turning to the topic I prefer to devote my energies to (despite what may seem to be the case), it seems that Colin Powell has been mentioned as a possible education secretary.

On which note—-it’s the annual convention for the New Jersey Education Association and Charlie (a student in NJ’s public schools for most of the past 7 years) has had Thursday and Friday off (hence a much appreciated grandparents visit). And while preoccupied with everything previously noted in this post, guiding Charlie (who made his Monday lunch after school on Wednesday) through a smoother, or reasonably smooth, long weekend has been the main business around here. He’s spent a fair amount of time shopping for new pants (this growth spurt thing just won’t let off), hanging with my parents and using an old computer. I took him for a long swim on Thursday night, Jim did a 12-mile biker ride, and we all went out for Spanish food afterwards.

Correlation between all that and a quite peaceful easy-feeling boy?

If you choose to see it that way…………..

Robert Kennedy, Jr., and the EPA?

November 6, 2008 by Kristina Chew, PhD  
Filed under Cause, Environment, Politics, Science, Vaccines

Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. is (per the November 5th Huffington Post) under consideration by President-Elect Barack Obama to head the EPA?

The Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., who, in June of 2007, equated those people criticizing mothers of autistic children who believe that thimerasol in vaccines causes autism with those who “once blamed autism on ‘bad parenting,’ and ‘uninvolved’ moms”—with those who believe that”bad parenting” causes autism?

Being myself (as I wrote back in June of 2007) an “involved mother” of an autistic child, I appreciate this concern about public perceptions of mothers of autistic children. Once upon a theory of autism causation, mothers were held accountable for being cold “refrigerator mothers” whose extreme emotional reserve was thought to make their children autistic. Now, as Kennedy writes, scorn is cast upon some mothers of autistic children for being “too involved.”

But based on what he wrote back in June of 2007 and also in his 2005 Rolling Stone piece, Deadly Immunity: Robert F. Kennedy Jr. investigates the government cover-up of a mercury/autism scandal—-it might be said that Kennedy’s somewhat extensively “involved” in putting forth a certain hypothesis about what causes autism that is not substantiated by the latest studies? A hypothesis that has perhaps heralded the rise of dubious autism “treatments” such as chelation?

Seed Magazine endorsed Obama for his “embrace of transparency and evidence-based decision-making, his intelligence and curiosity echo this new way of looking at the world.” Here’s hoping this is not just a promise, but the reality for the next four years.

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