Coming Your Way: Too Good by Jenny
September 8, 2008 by Kristina Chew, PhD
Filed under Media, Vaccines
Bedding, apparel, feeding products, toys/activity sets, cleaning products, bathroom textiles, gluten-free food and beverages, and all non-toxic, and all at affordable prices: Did someone say too good?
Sorry, “autism mother” and pro-vaccine-safety/anti-vaccine activist Jenny McCarthy already did. According to Technology Marketing, McCarthy has just signed a deal with Los Angeles licensing agency Brand Sense Partners, to “develop a lifestyle brand called Too Good by Jenny, which will be positioned as providing safe, non-toxic surroundings for children.”
Sounds very “green”—-will “non-toxic vaccines” be on the list of future “Too Good” products?
Addendum added 8.35am EST: According to some, there’s nothing more toxic than an autism/autistic blogger.
Register for NYU Child Study Center Online Town Hall at 9am TODAY
February 26, 2008 by Kristina Chew, PhD
Filed under Disability Rights, Media, new york
Update, 3.10pm: For a transcript of the Town Hall forum, you can go here.
If you tried to post a comment and it did not appear, you can send it to dkmnow (at-thing) yahoo (dot-thing) com, or leave it in the comments section below.
Today from 11 a.m. - 1 p.m., the NYU Child Study Center is holding an Online Town Hall on Children’s Mental Health. Details can be found here; registration starts at 9 a.m. today and commenters have contributed thoughts on what to address in the forum. How can we improve awareness and care for individuals with conditions like autism, Asperger’s Syndrome, bulimia, OCD, depression, and in ways that do not simply denounce and shame people? How can we advertise not fear, but hope?
NYU Child Study Center to Hold Town Hall Meeting, Post “Ransom Notes”
February 24, 2008 by Kristina Chew, PhD
Filed under Anorexia, Asperger's Syndrome, Disability Rights, Psychiatry, Stereotypes, new york
Back in December, the New York University Child Study Center launched a public awareness advertisement campaign called “Ransom Notes,” in which. The campaign was pulled a few weeks later, in no small part due to the work of disability rights advocacy groups, parents, and many concerned individuals, who questioned the negative portrayal of autism and psychiatric disorders by the “Ransom Notes” campaign. On Tuesday, February 26, 2008 from 11 a.m. - 1 p.m., the NYU Child Study Center is holding an Online Town Hall on Children’s Mental Health. Details can be found here. How can we improve awareness and care of these issues, in ways that do not simply denounce and shame those with conditions like autism, Asperger’s Syndrome, bulimia, OCD, depression?
This and Last’s Weeks Top Posts
Neon-bright marquees and music (from B.B. King’s theater–Buckwheat Zydeco is playing) and tour buses driving up halfway onto 42nd street and Russian Spanish Korean Twi being spoken and the smell of the gyros and steam from the subway grates: That was what Charlie walked through, holding Jim’s arm and grinning, with my parents and me bringing up the rear on Saturday afternoon in New York City. Too much going on, same as the topics for the past two weeks’ posts.
- What’s It All About, Eli? (2): Keeping the Faith
While the court case that the main character of ABC’s legal drama, Eli Stone, successfully argues in the show’s first episode involves vaccines and “mercuritol,” a stand-in for thimerasol that is claimed to have caused a child to become autistic, it is matters of faith and spirituality that people seem particularly to be eager to hear about in regard to autism. - Super Tuesday Tomorrow: The Candidates’ Views on Autism
Not that you want to know, but I vote for Obama. - Whack, Wack, Quack
A typo on an Age of Autism post by Dan Olmsted leads me to reflect on the mob, the Sopranos, the movie “On the Waterfront,” and Lucky Ducks. - Surprise Surprise: No link between the MMR and autism
A study in the Archives of Disease in Childhood shows that there is no link between the MMR vaccine and autism. Repeat: There is no link between the MMR vaccine and autism. - $200,000
How much is too much, or maybe just enough, to spend on “treatments” for autism? - A Physiological Marker for Autism?
Scientists from the Baylor College of Medicine have identified a physiological marker that might be used to create an assessment tool for those with “higher functioning autism” by looking at the brain responses of adolescents with Asperger Syndrome when they played an interactive trust game. Is this a useful assessment tool? - Autism and Schizophrenia
In the past, autistic individuals might have received a diagnosis of schizophrenia (or mental retardation, or something else); they could not be diagnosed with autism because autism as we understand it today did not exist as a diagnostic category. That is, for much of the history of autism—if we posit that autism has always existed and was only very recently identified as such—-autistic persons did not have an “autism diagnosis,” but were considered “something else.” - How to Get a Good Night’s Sleep
Researchers at the Vanderbilt Sleep Disorders Center have found that melatonin “shows promise” in helping some autistic children fall asleep. - Special Ed for Asian Students
The Boston Globe reports that 2.3 percent of students in Massachusetts receiving special education services are Asian, while Asian students make up 4.8 of the public school student population; in Boston, Asians make up 9 percent of public school students, while only 3 percent are enrolled in special education. What’s going on? - Tased
15-year-old Tony Presley, who has high-functioning autism, was tased by police on January 28th for “getting out of control at school.” - Study on Adult Sexuality in Autistic Individuals
The North Shore Long Island Jewish Health System is doing a joint project with the University of New Brunswick on Adult Sexuality for individuals between 21 and 65 who fall into the Autism Spectrum. Individuals can participate in the study via a confidential online survey (which commenters have some concerns about). - Maternal Immune Systems and Maternal Antibodies: A causal factor for some cases of autism?
Researchers at the University of California-Davis M.I.N.D. Institute suggest that some cases of “regressive autism”– in which a child seems to be developing normally and then loses skills and becomes autistic, in contrast to “early onset autism”—-may be connected to the immune systems of mothers during pregnancy. Antibodies in the blood of mothers of autistic children were found to bind with fetal brain cells and affect healthy brain development. - The Wearying of the Green
What in the world does “green our vaccines” mean? Maybe Generation Rescue (who took out a full page ad in USA Today proclaiming this) knows. - High and Low
Charlie takes his first cello lesson. - Kids With Autism Are Not Retards
That’s what Big Brother contestant Adam Jasinski said: Many (most/all of us) beg to differ. - The Medication Question AgainThere’s an image out there in the public mind that people seek out prescriptions to pop pills for minor ailments and issues, and put more medication into the mouths of babes (their children) because Johnny can’t sit still after lunch: But is this true?



























