Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: autism + age + first  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)

NeoClassics Films Lands "The Black Balloon"
MarketWatch -
It is a story about fitting in, discovering love, and accepting your family for who they are -- and in this case an autistic older brother who takes the ...
Tuesday's death notices
Pottstown Mercury, PA -
In lieu of flowers contributions may be made in his memory to: Humane Society of Berks Co., 1801 N. 11th St., Reading, PA 19604, and/or the Autism Society ...
Autism 'chaos' as one-third wait over year for diagnosis
Irish Independent, Ireland -
In Meath, seven children up to the age of six are waiting six months. However, 36 children between six and 18 face a wait of two years for diagnosis in the ...
Weightlifter pushed through herniated disk, failed comebacks
USA Today -
"I realized that if you compared a child being diagnosed with autism to not making the Olympic team, all of a sudden that Olympic thing doesn't seem so bad. ...
Amanda Peet, Here's an Idea for Your Next X-Files Movie
Age of Autism, Trumbull -
It was California's numbers, in fact, which first confirmed what parents had long suspected---and "experts" long denied--that the rate of autism among young ...
Where emphasis is always on improv
Philadelphia Inquirer, PA -
A gentle guy who loves to pepper his parents with kisses, Colin was found at age 3 to have Autistic Spectrum Disorder (ASD). According to the National ...

MLive.com
Contact the Newspaper:
MLive.com, MI - Aug 3, 2008
Dean was diagnosed with an autism spectrum disorder at age 3. Flint Journal feedback: Do you think vaccinations can actually do more harm than good for some ...
Tuesday's Community News: Brenda Lucas
Huntington Herald Dispatch, WV -
CO-CHAIR: A Huntington woman has been named co-chair of the Autism Society of America's Panel of Professional Advisors. Dr. Barbara Becker-Cottrill, ...
Cancer registry extensive, but less information about other illnesses
Baltimore Sun, United States -
"The same goes for many things that are very important, such as Alzheimer's, autism and multiple sclerosis," he said. "Asthma and heart disease are things ...
East Lancs dyslexia scheme rolled out to Wales
Lancashire Telegraph, UK -
So successful has the programme been in helping her pupils with learning difficulties including dyslexia, dyspraxia and autism, that Pauline contacted the ...
Source: Google News

Early recognition of children with autism: A study of first birthday home videotapes -
J Osterling, G Dawson - Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 1994 - Springer
... First, are differences in autistic and normal children's behavior apparent at 1
year of age? ... identify specific be- haviors that distinguish autism? ...

A Screening Instrument for Autism at 18 Months of Age: A 6-Year Follow-up Study. -
G BAIRD, FRC Paed, T CHARMAN, S BARON-COHEN, A COX … - Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent …, 2000 - jaacap.com
... age of first concern, time of onset with hindsight, and loss of skills. Next, we
compared the ADI-R dimension scores of the subjects with childhood autism and ...

Mumps, measles, and rubella vaccine and the incidence of autism recorded by general practitioners: a … -
JA Kaye, M del Mar Melero-Montes, H Jick - BMJ: British Medical Journal, 2001 - pubmedcentral.nih.gov
... Subsequent analyses were restricted to 114 boys born in 1988-93 who had a first
recorded diagnosis of autism at age 2 to 5 years (24-71 months)?that is ...

Autism diagnostic interview: A standardized investigator-based instrument -
A Couteur, M Rutter, C Lord, P Rios, S Robertson, … - Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 1989 - Springer
... The Autism Diagnostic Interview (ADI) was designed to be ... early adulthood, and with
any mental age level from 2 ... had its origins in an interview first devised by ...

Evidence of Brain Overgrowth in the First Year of Life in Autism -
E Courchesne, R Carper, N Akshoomoff - JAMA, 2003 - Am Med Assoc
... scale of the Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule (3.6 vs 2.0; t 20 = ?2.21; P =
.04); a strong trend toward a later age of onset for first words (44 vs 30 ...

Attentional Skills During the First 6 Months of Age in Autism Spectrum Disorder. -
S MAESTRO, F MURATORI, MC CAVALLARO, F PEI, D … - Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent …, 2002 - jaacap.com
... 2002pp 1239-1245. Attentional Skills During the First 6 Months of Age in Autism
Spectrum Disorder. [Articles]. MAESTRO, SANDRA MD; MURATORI ...

[PDF] Autism and measles, mumps, and rubella vaccine: no epidemiological evidence for a causal association -
B Taylor, E Miller, CP Farrington, MC Petropoulos, … - Lancet, 1999 - freenetpages.co.uk
... Since MMR vaccine is given at around 12?15 months of age and the mean age at which
parents of children with autism first report concern about their child?s ...
-

Autism During Infancy: A Retrospective Video Analysis of Sensory-Motor and Social Behaviors at 9?12 … -
GT Baranek - Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 1999 - Springer
... eg, difficulty controlling variables such as the age of subjects ... realm suggest that
youngchil- dren with autism can be ... in a video study of first birthdays com ...

Autism Diagnostic Interview-Revised: A revised version of a diagnostic interview for caregivers of … -
C Lord, M Rutter, A Couteur - Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 1994 - Springer
... More specific questions about the age when abnormalities were first manifest were ...
information for differential diagnosis between autism and syn ...

Behavioral manifestations of autism in the first year of life -
L Zwaigenbaum, S Bryson, T Rogers, W Roberts, J … - International Journal of Developmental Neuroscience, 2005 - Elsevier
... may be observed in the first year of life. Our preliminary results indicate that
by 12 months of age, siblings who are later diagnosed with autism may be ...

Source: Google Scholar
 
 

The Age of Autism: 'The first casualty'

WASHINGTON, July 27 (UPI) -- A medical doctor in the U.S. House of Representatives delivered a harsh judgment this week on public health authorities whose job is making sure vaccinations are as safe as humanly possible.

"Federal agencies charged with overseeing vaccine safety research have failed," said Rep. David Weldon, R-Fla. "They have failed to provide sufficient resources for vaccine safety research. They have failed to fund extramural research. And, they have failed to free themselves from conflicts of interest that serve to undermine confidence in the safety of vaccines.

"The American public deserves better, and increasingly parents and the public at large are demanding better."

Weldon concentrated his fire on the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which recommends the childhood immunization schedule through its Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices -- and has conducted numerous studies that find no association between vaccines and serious health problems, particularly autism.

 

But Weldon said the federal government in toto has failed to do its job.

"Several issues relating to vaccine safety have persisted for years. The response from public health authorities has been largely defensive from the outset, and the studies plagued by conflicts of interest."

It should be noted the CDC stands behind its research and that last year it separated its Immunization Safety Office from the National Immunization Program. Weldon says that's simply not enough to ensure impartial, aggressive investigation.

Weldon introduced a bill -- co-sponsored by Rep. Carolyn Maloney, D-N.Y. -- that would create a new agency of vaccine safety that reports to the secretary of health and human services; require research to be independent of any vaccine-related decisions; and establish an 18-member advisory committee to create a vaccine research agenda. At least one-third of the committee would be made up of people with vaccine injuries or a vaccine-injured child.

 
Google
Web www.iconocast.com
 

Given the realities of the legislative calendar, Weldon told me, he's hoping to build support and hold hearings this fall on the measure and re-introduce it in the new Congress that convenes in January.

Weldon's approach is wide-ranging. For one thing, he's not putting all his eggs in the mercury-equals-autism basket, so to speak -- he's not asking for more research solely to determine whether the mercury-based preservative thimerosal triggered a huge rise in autism diagnoses in the 1990s.

While that question has been the focus of attention -- and properly so, given the government's own decision to phase out thimerosal from routine childhood immunizations beginning in 1999 -- there is the prospect that other vaccine ingredients, and other side effects, may be insidiously at work.

"There are unresolved questions about the MMR (measles-mumps-rubella) vaccine that arose in 1998 that should be fully investigated," Weldon said.

Indeed, this column recently reported on a cluster of cases in Olympia, Wash., that suggest a possible risk of autism from getting MMR and chickenpox shots too close together in a susceptible subset of children.

One of the children diagnosed with autism was in a clinical trial of a new vaccine combining all four of those live-virus vaccines, including 10 times as much chickenpox component as the standalone chickenpox vaccine. The manufacturer, Merck & Co., acknowledged that case -- and another from a similar trial in Olympia involving an experimental chickenpox vaccine given at the same time as the MMR -- was not reported to the FDA until March.

That was the same month we first inquired about the cases -- and six months after the new vaccine, called ProQuad, was approved by the FDA for all children 12 months to 12 years old.

Merck, like other vaccine manufacturers, mainstream medical groups and public health authorities, says there is no association between vaccines and autism. Weldon's bill would put that assertion to the test -- without the conflicts he says make such assurances suspect.

Beyond autism, a range of concerns are "out there" about the childhood immunization schedule, which has expanded greatly over the past two decades and now includes a Hepatitis B shot on the day of birth and the prospect of more combinations and components in coming years.

Few argue against the basic premise of mass vaccination against deadly diseases. The legitimate public-policy question is whether the authorities have gotten the details wrong -- vaccinating too soon against too many illnesses, not all of them life-threatening or likely to afflict children, and undertaking too little independent surveillance of possible unintended consequences.

From that perspective, it was hard to ignore the convergence of events at the Capitol Wednesday morning -- as Weldon spoke, members were awaiting the arrival of the Iraqi prime minister, Nouri al-Maliki, to address a joint session.

In the new book "Fiasco" about the Iraq war by Washington Post Pentagon Correspondent Thomas E. Ricks, the failure of public officials to properly gauge the real risks and potential rewards of the invasion are laid out in devastating detail.

"None of this was inevitable," Ricks writes. "It was made possible only through the intellectual acrobatics of simultaneously 'worst-casing' the threat presented by Iraq and 'best-casing' the subsequent cost and difficulty of occupying the country."

That made me go back and dig out a paper titled "From Safety Last To Children First," by Mark Blaxill of the group SafeMinds and Barbara Loe Fisher, president of the National Vaccine Information Center. It was submitted to a CDC panel on vaccine safety in 2004.

"The obvious concern is that benefits may be overstated and that risks will be suppressed," they wrote in terms that eerily echo Ricks'. And they made the war analogy explicit, citing "a mission of fighting a 'war on disease' that disregards the secondary and tertiary consequences of war and views innocent children as inevitable consequences."

"The language of conflict -- the 'war on disease,' 'combating the causes of epidemics,' 'fighting emerging infections' -- is closely connected to the language of military power and, of course, 'Disease Control.' History teaches us that when government officials are determined to fight a war, any war, truth can be the first casualty."

It would be ironic if the same patterns that led to a foreign policy "fiasco" were at work in domestic health policy. Weldon's bill is a first step toward finding out -- and making sure, if that did happen, it gets fixed before more casualties pile up.

 

Continue News With: H2 ; H3 ; H4 ; H5 ; H6 ; H7 ; H8 ; H9 ; H9A


ADVERTISEMENT

Iconocast is about learning and teaching without borders; we offer eMarketing, Internet Advertising, Internet Marketing, Search Engine Optimization, Search Engine Marketing, Online Branding, and eMarketing News Services. Home

 © 2002-2006

Keywords:

Contact Iconocast

Home Page