Posted on 11/12/2007 7:51:01 PM PST by jazusamo
November 13, 2007
Autism is a devastating condition, both for those who have it and for their parents. At this point, its causes are unknown and if there is any cure for it, that is unknown as well.
There are many ways of coping with tragedies. One of the less promising, and often dangerous, ways is to launch a crusade.
Crusades may be emotionally satisfying, politically popular and welcomed by the media. But crusaders are not known for caution, for weighing evidence or for counting the costs, which may extend well beyond the cost in money.
There have already been many casualties in the crusade against autism, and there may be far more if recent recommendations of the American Academy of Pediatrics are carried out to have every child tested for autism twice by age two.
Think about it: How many people are qualified to diagnose autism? Enough to test every child in America? Not bloody likely.
Professor Stephen Camarata of Vanderbilt University has tested and treated children with autism for more than 20 years.
"While it is relatively easy to identify a five year old as autistic," according to Professor Camarata, "it is much more difficult to reliably diagnose a preschooler or toddler."
The word "reliably" is crucial. Anybody can unreliably diagnose autism, just as anybody can unreliably predict the weather or the stock market.
The consequences of unreliable diagnoses of autism can be traumatic for parents and children alike.
As a result of organizing a group of parents of late-talking children back in 1993, I encountered many stories of emotional devastation that these parents went through because their children were diagnosed as autistic -- diagnoses which the passing years have shown to be false more often than not.
As a result of writing books about these parents and children -- the most recent being "The Einstein Syndrome" -- I have heard from more than a hundred other parents with very similar stories.
Professor Camarata at Vanderbilt has a far larger group of parents of late-talking children, since he specializes in studying and treating speech disorders, and he has likewise found numerous cases of false diagnoses of autism among children who are late in beginning to talk.
More is involved than the needless emotional stresses of the parents. Many of the treatments inflicted on children diagnosed as autistic would be called child abuse if they were not done as medical procedures, and they can set back or distort a child's development.
Once the "autistic" label has been put on a child, it can follow him and her into schools and beyond, causing that child to be treated differently by teachers, nurses and others.
Too many people refuse to reconsider any evidence contrary to the label, however blatant that evidence becomes or however much that evidence increases over the years.
The initial evidence on which a diagnosis of autism was based may be nothing more than a checklist of characteristics of autistic children, often administered by someone with nothing more to go on than that checklist.
The fundamental problem is that many items on such a checklist can apply to many children who are not autistic. A study of gifted children, for example, found many of them showing the kinds of characteristics found on checklists for autism.
According to Professor Camarata, "because there are no reliable biomedical markers for autism, diagnosis must rely on subjective rating scales making it difficult if not impossible to conduct accurate screening in toddlers or preschoolers."
But it is precisely the checklist approach that is being urged by those who are crusading for every child to be diagnosed for autism before age two.
Like most crusaders, they seem unwilling to consider the possibility of errors, much less the consequences of those errors.
The very definition of autism has been expanded in recent years to include what is called "the autism spectrum." What this means, among other things, is that there is now far more wiggle room for those whose diagnoses have proved to be wrong, who refuse to admit it, and who are now even more unaccountable than ever.
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Thomas Sowell is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305. His Web site is www.tsowell.com.
I guess that’s one thing to be said for having kids late in life, as did Dr. Sowell.
Keeps old age from getting boring.
I thought the author was talking about a Templar Crusade.
Dr. Thomas Sowell for president.
ping
posyt=post
Hah! So did I when I saw the column title. Thanks for your post and the links.
Smart guy, that Dr. Sowell. Maybe they talk late because they have nothing to say. Kids with a lot of energy, they gave them an extra gym class. ‘Course way back when, they worked the farm before coming to school.
Exactly...I’ve known a few adults over many years that had little to say but when they did speak it paid to listen, they were usually right.
I hope that medicine finds some hints on Autism soon.
That said, TS raises some excellent points.
Thanks for the ping.
I’ll never forget a lady teacher my son had in the third grade, she was about ready to retire. My son was a slow learner and we talked to her about it. She said not to worry, he would do fine and improve as the years passed. To this day I don’t know how she knew it but he became a straight A student all through high school and had a 3.7 something GPA in college.
I’m so glad to hear that your son is doing well. I taught school for many years. Third and fourth graders were some of my favorite students. The desire to do well, and supportive parents are key ingredients to student success. God bless you both.
My uncle was 'diagnosed' as 'retarded' as a boy and almost sent to 'special' school. He went on to become chairman of medicine at Northwestern - actually he was just extremely shy.
3 doctors in a row said I needed spinal surgery when I was young to 'correct' my inward pointing feet. The fourth realized that my shoes were just too tight.
Thank God I come from a family who didn't believe 'experts'
Dr. Sowell’s children were born in the 1970’s and are adults now. Iirc, the son who motivated Dr. Sowell’s interest in autism misdiagnosis is a computer programmer now.
We ended up in Nashville seeing Dr. Camarata. He told us our son is NOT autistic. They gave us things to do to help him and with their help and continued evaluations over the next couple years our son overcame his language delay and is now doing very well.
I agree with Dr. Sowell about 90 to 95% of the time. So I get the funny feeling that when we disagree, he’s right and I’m wrong!
Our son was a late talker. I got Sowell’s book from the library hoping against hope that he didn’t have autism, but he definitely does. (PDD-NOS, mid level autism.)
It should be possible for people of average intelligence to diagnose autism. In most cases it is not that tricky. But Dr. Sowell is right about the risk of “false positives.” We are praying for breakthroughs for those working in this field...
I know Dr. Sowell has a child diagnosed as autistic many years ago. Does this article intend to say that that diagnosis was incorrect? Or perhaps he’s speaking out for other parents with misdiagnosed children.
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