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Autism Vox

Archive for the ‘Diagnosis’ Category

October 12th, 2008

After Many Years, A Diagnosis

Deborah Lipsky was in her 40s when she found out that has autism, today’s Carroll County Times notes. Others have described getting diagnosed with Asperger’s Syndrome in their 50s; Nicky Gottlieb was 21 when he was diagnosed, after his sister, Lizzie Gottlieb, started to make a documentary about him, Today’s Man. When claims of a […]

By Kristina Chew, PhD -- 10 comments

October 7th, 2008

This is a Research Study: What Can We Learn about Autism from Autistic Persons?

A new study from Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics asks
What Can We Learn about Autism from Autistic Persons?
Is that a question that needs to be asked?
Over at Science Daily, a review of the study is given the title
“What Happens When We Ask Autistic Persons What Is Wrong With Them?“
I kind of think that’s the wrong question to […]

By Kristina Chew, PhD -- 9 comments

October 2nd, 2008

D***d if We Do, and D***d if We Don’t

As the October 1st issue of Scientific American Mind reminds us, words have power. I know this even more whenever I hear my son Charlie speak. He was very, very late to talk and he first didn’t talk at all, but used sign language. Today he speaks in short phrases and sentences, and almost-sentences.
A lot […]

By Kristina Chew, PhD -- 8 comments

September 28th, 2008

Last Week’s Top Posts

We began the week with Monday in Manhattan and ended it with dinner and a walk across the Hudson River. Inbetween:

Simon Baron-Cohen on “Disorder,” “Cure,” and Autism
Says Baron-Cohen: “The word ‘disorder’ is too negative. I use the word “condition” – autism can be disabling, but not all of its features involve disability. Some of […]

By Kristina Chew, PhD -- 0 comments

September 28th, 2008

The Dreaded “A” Word?

So autism is referred to at the start of an article in today’s Northeast Missouri Daily Journal.
Never give up, it’s noted in the next few sentences—yes.
But this “dreaded” business—-something we’ve got to change.
Tags: asd, asperger, autism, autism blog, Diagnosis, disabilities blog, disability, dreaded, Education, missouri, Parenting, pdd-nos

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By Kristina Chew, PhD -- 10 comments

September 26th, 2008

A Method to Predict the “Severity” of Autism?

Tracking eye movements has been described as a new way to detect autism in infants; researchers have also found that, when autistic children look at faces with animated expressions, they tend to focus on the eyes and mouth. A study published in the Archives of General Psychiatry has found that determining whether a toddler focuses […]

By Kristina Chew, PhD -- 16 comments

September 21st, 2008

Autism and Gender: Are there differences?

A recent post asking if autism is different in girls led to an interesting discussion; Sullivan also noted that the IACC Strategic Plan specifically mentioned “research on females with ASD to better characterize clinical, biological and protective features.” Back in August of 2007, the Telergraph, Charlotte Moore (author of George and Sam and the mother […]

By Kristina Chew, PhD -- 5 comments

September 20th, 2008

Best Posts From Last Week

The National Institute of Mental Health calls off a study on chelation as a treatment for autistic children. Safety concerns are cited and it also needs to be noted that the reasons for using chelation to “treat” autistic children rest on an unproven hypothesis about autism causation, that autistic children have mercury and/or “heavy metals” […]

By Kristina Chew, PhD -- 0 comments

September 11th, 2008

Looking for an Autism Genotype

An article in the September 10th New England Journal of Medicine entitled Recurrent Rearrangements of Chromosome 1q21.1 and Variable Pediatric Phenotypes describes the associations between a microdeletion at 1q21.1 and impairments including mental retardation associated with microcephaly, cardiac abnormalities, or cataracts. A microdeletion at 16p11.2 is associated with susceptibility to mental retardation or autism and […]

By Kristina Chew, PhD -- 5 comments

September 9th, 2008

Back to School, With (or Without) a Diagnosis

We’ve been through a lot of challenges with Charlie over the past several years but the one thing we’ve never had to argue about is his diagnosis. While the St. Paul Public School District initially wrote down “communication disorder” as Charlie’s diagnosis on his first Individual Family Services Plan (IFSP; we were living in Minnesota […]

By Kristina Chew, PhD -- 9 comments