Tag autism

Did You Say Asperger-us?

A pair of articles have drawn some interest in various online haunts:

First, the Wall Street Journal had this story a couple of weeks ago about classifying adult picky eating behavior as a variant of Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder and adding it to the DSM-IV as a clinical diagnosis.

Now this week there is an article in Time Magazine that looks at research which asks whether or not picky eating is an early indicator of autism

So, clearly we’re not talking about your average childhood aversions to food or even those adults (and you know who you are) who won’t eat mushrooms or tomatoes, or something. The people in the WSJ article have full-blown eating disorders that rival the severity of anorexia and bulimia because they restrict their diets to very limited numbers of foods, often based on irrational reasons. Meanwhile, the British researchers observed that children who developed autism often had more limited ranges of preferred foods, but it’s more of a symptom in the vein of some of the other sensory issues that affect autistics than a dysfunctional behavior. Nevertheless, given the link between autism and OCDs, it shouldn’t be all that surprising that eating behaviors would be a common element.

EmailStumbleUponRedditFacebookTwitterGoogle+Share

Related Posts:

Why We Immunize

I’m sure you heard the news story a couple of weeks ago about a federal claims court finding that vaccines containing thimerosal and/or the MMR vaccine in particular do not cause autism. Though it’s a legal finding, the court reviewed thousands of pages of research, as well as the medical records of thousands of individuals, and heard testimony from expert witnesses as part of their decision.

Needless to say, the scientifically-based, evidence-backed, legally-considered opinion of a panel of judges won’t change the minds of the nutjobs in the anti-vaccination movement. If we’ve learned anything over the last eight years, all you need to do is substitute whatever reality is most convenient for your political agenda in place of objective and empirical findings. And when you’ve got a hot ‘n’ spicy celebrity like Jenny McCarthy on your side, you don’t need to pay the slightest attention to whatever those freedom-hating science-lovers have to say.

Oh, well.

Meanwhile, back here in the reality-based community, I read this outstanding post at the group blog Making Light called “Why We Immunize” . The author of the post, Jim Macdonald, talks about the ravages of the diseases that generationally decimated populations again and again: rubella, polio, diptheria, hepatitis. His post is punctuated with photos of the graves of children lost so very young to illnesses that simply do not exist in the world of today’s children, with poems and lyrics, and chilling photographs of children stricken with those diseases. It is simply an outstanding example of a well-written blog post and I recommend it highly.

I also recommend taking the time to watch this recent American Experience documentary about the polio scares of the 20th century and the battle between Jonas Salk and Albert Sabin to develop an effective vaccine. Though Salk was first to go public with a working vaccine, it would eventually be Sabin’s that would completely eradicate polio in the United States. The film interviews people who were personally affected by polio to differing degrees and does an excellent job of capturing the state of panic that would descend on towns every year as “polio season” came around. With any luck, we won’t have to let the current panic-mongering take us backward to a time of real panic.

EmailStumbleUponRedditFacebookTwitterGoogle+Share

Related Posts:

John McCain’s “Tales Of The Bizarro World”

Last weekend, The Presumptive Nominee made more than a few waves by saying that there was a link between childhood vaccines and autism, even though research has shown that there is no link. In fact, recent research suggests genetic causes and heightened awareness resulting in better diagnoses. But, then, Republicans seem to have a very different idea about scientific research in the first place.

Emboldened by their battle-scarred Champion, right-wingers everywhere have decided to go public with their bizarro world scenarios. The Wall Street Journal told us yesterday not to worry about “Peak Oil” and climbing petroleum prices, there’s plenty of oil to go around.

The Drudge Report wants you to know that global warming is just a myth — he links this article which claims that the colder-than-usual January temperatures “wipe out most of the warming recorded over the past 100 years” (though I will note that the author of this article says DailyTech.com has erroneously interpreted the data).

And Discover Magazine doesn’t want you to think you should be one iota less terrified of the H5N1 virus just because hardly anybody has died of it after three years of dire warnings.

In related news, Paris Hilton just won the Nobel Peace Prize, and green monkeys are flying out of my butt!

EmailStumbleUponRedditFacebookTwitterGoogle+Share

Related Posts:

When You Have A Hammer, Everything Looks Like A Nail

Slate has an article today that argues against the current meme that there has been a sharp uptick in the number of autistic children in the United States.

The article draws its evidence from a new book called Unstrange Minds, which contends that the “autism epidemic” is yet another case of heightened awareness of the issue resulting in increased numbers of diagnoses. That’s not quite the same thing as the overdiagnosis issue, which has resulted in legions of children being incorrectly labelled as having attention deficit disorders, but it’s related. Autism did not even exist as a diagnosis until the 1940s, and so countless numbers of autistic individuals were simply seen as insane, retarded, or as “idiot savants”.

The author of the book being cited opines that people want to see autism as something caused by external influences, and thus also potentially curable by external influences. We’ve turned being fat into a disease, so why shouldn’t we turn autism into a “disease”, a condition to be identified, studied, given a path of causality, and ultimately “cured”. And the only way to get enough resources devoted to the “cure” is to convince enough people that the “problem” is growing. Unfortunately, just as their efforts to place the blame on thimerosal have repeatedly turned up empty, so eventually will the insistance on finding a “cure” for a non-existant “epidemic”.

EmailStumbleUponRedditFacebookTwitterGoogle+Share

Related Posts:

All Original Content Copyright © BrianKaneOnline
All Other Content Copyright © Its Original Authors

Built on Notes Blog Core
Powered by WordPress

Switch to our mobile site