Guest guest Posted October 30, 2007 Report Share Posted October 30, 2007 NVIC E-news AAP Urges Early Autism Diagnosis, Then Drugs Often Used by Barbara Loe Fisher America's pediatricians, who cannot explain to American parents why so many of their young, highly vaccinated children are developing autism and other developmental disabilities, announced this week at a conference in San Francisco that it is time for doctors to get serious about diagnosing autism early and often. http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,85 99,1677611,00.html?xid=feed--healthsci This push for " early diagnosis " before age two is coupled with a push for " early intervention. " Currently that intervention involves doctors prescribing psychiatric drugs for 80 percent of the children diagnosed with autism or Asperger disorder according to a report released at the same conference. http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/565002 Although few parents would argue that it is important to recognize when a child is regressing physically, mentally and emotionally into autism, many parents are more interested in addressing the biological root causes for the kinds of brain and immune system dysfunction that their autistic children are exhibiting, rather than giving their children psychotropic drugs that only suppress the symptoms. Many parents, like Goldenberg in the early 1990's and McCarthy a decade later, have found that eliminating gluten and casein from their child's diet and employing other alternative therapies to repair healthy immune function, can effectively address vaccine-related biological causes for autism and greatly improve their children's health. However, currently mainstream American pediatricians are overwhelmingly attempting to deal with the autism explosion by drugging children. Tobias Gerhard, PhD, assistant professor at the Rutgers University Institute for Health, Health Care Policy, and Aging Research acknowledged that the prevalence of Autism Spectrum Disorders increased 10-fold in the last decade and presented an analysis of medical care surveys reflecting two million health visits involving autism or Asperger disorder. He found that children were overwhelmingly male and white and that disruptive behavioral disorders were involved with 3 of every 10 cases. The surveys revealed that about 80% of children diagnosed with Autism Spectrum Disorder are treated with at least one psychiatic drug; 30% are given antipsychotic drugs, 40% antidepressants, 40% stimulants and about 30% some other drug, including mood stabilizers and anticonvulsants. Some children are prescribed several medications. " As with many psychiatric conditions in children, we really know very little [about] how these drugs actually work and how they should be used in practice, " Dr. Gerhard said. In Canada, where there is a nationalized health care system and long waiting lines for a doctor's appointment, there is a warning by Canadian pediatricians that early screening and treatment for autism is easier said than done. The former president of the Canadian Pediatric Society, Emmet Francoeur, points out that increased screening would involve an increase in the number of evaluation teams and treatment services, all of which is time consuming and expensive. He says " Unfortunately, unlike a broken bone or pneumonia, where you can take an x-ray and come up with a diagnosis, it takes multiple observers looking at multiple aspects of a child's development to diagnose autism. " http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/ story/RTGAM.20071030.wautism30/BNStory/specialSci enceandHealth/home As hard as it is for pediatricians to figure out how they are going to identify and treat lots of highly vaccinated autistic children, it is much harder for parents searching for answers for why their once healthy children developed autism and how to help them heal. The diagnostic screening tests, the visits to different doctors specializing in different parts of the body and the drug and behavioral therapies that may or may not work, can bankrupt the average middle class family. One day, the educational and health care costs associated with the biggest epidemic our nation has ever experienced - the chronic disease and disability epidemic - may bankrupt our nation. It is a chronic illness epidemic that makes the polio epidemic of the 1950's look small by comparison. We are all paying a very high price for the failure of pediatricians, drug companies and government health officials to act responsibly in the 1980's when parents of DPT vaccine injured children pleaded with them to conduct methodologically sound scientific studies to investigate the biological mechanisms and genetic factors involved in vaccine-induced regression and neuroimmune dysfunction. http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,1677611,00.html?xid=feed-yaho o-healthsci Finding - and Fighting - Autism Early TIME Magazine October 30, 2007 by Wallis From the earliest months, a healthy baby engages in an astonishing range of social behaviors. Most will begin smiling back at a loved one in the first four months of life. Most will follow a parent's gaze with their own eyes by eight months. Most will also study a caregiver's facial expressions and mimic exhibits of fear, surprise or delight with their own tiny features. They will babble a conversation back and forth by nine months, respond to their names by 10 months, and begin to point to a desired toy or treat by around a year. But some babies won't do these things, and a pattern of such deficits can be an early sign of autism. Despite these and many other early tip-offs, autism spectrum disorders (ASD) are rarely diagnosed before age 3. More subtle forms, such as Asperger's Syndrome, may not be recognized until the child begins school. The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) would like to change this. At its annual meeting, held in San Francisco on Monday, the AAP released two reports: one aimed at helping pediatricians recognize autism spectrum disorders - in all their varieties - by age 2 and the other at providing guidance for early intervention. At the same time the AAP formally recommended that all pediatricians routinely screen for autism at ages 18 months and 2 years and announced it was making a new " toolkit " of diagnostic information available to all its members - for about $70. The announcements came in response to a growing consensus that autism can be picked up very early in life and that early intervention holds the best promise for helping affected children. It is also an admission that, despite an explosion of news on autism in recent years, pediatricians are not currently doing an optimal job of identifying the spectrum of conditions now believed to affect as many as 1 in 150 children. A 2004 survey of primary care pediatricians found, for instance, that only 8% were routinely screening for autism, even though 44% said they saw at least 10 kids with autism in their practice. The AAP had already recommended routine screening for autism in 2006, but the new recommendations are more specific and backed by more information for practitioners. Two screenings are needed - one at 18 months and one at 24 months, explains Dr. Meyers, who authored one of the reports, because about a quarter of children with ASD appear to develop normally at first and then regress - losing early language and social behavior - sometime between 15 and 24 months. Meyers, a neurodevelopmental pediatrician with Geisinger Health System in Danville, Pa., wrote the AAP's new survey of research on managing the care of children with autism. His report supports intensive behavioral and speech therapy - at least 25 hours a week - beginning as early as possible. But, he concedes, there's a lack of rigorous, randomized research on what interventions work best. The report encourages pediatricians not to condemn parents who turn to alternative therapies, but to help guide them toward the safest and best researched approaches. " Don't just dismiss it out of hand, " says Meyers, " It's important to keep communication open and respect the fact that parents are going to be looking of answers. " http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/565002 (requires registration but it is free) Physicians Rely on Psychiatric Drugs to Treat Autism Spectrum Disorders Medscape October 29, 2007 by Brice (San Francisco) - An observational study of physician prescription patterns indicates that 80% of children diagnosed with autism or Asperger disorder are treated with at least 1 psychiatric drug. Results presented here at the American Academy of Pediatrics 2007 National Conference and Exhibition reflect the medical community's initial therapeutic response to the growing prevalence of autism spectrum disorders (ASD) including autism and the generally less debilitating Asperger disorder. An estimated 1 child in 150 in the United States and United Kingdom is affected by ASD, according to Tobias Gerhard, PhD, assistant professor at the Rutgers University Institute for Health, Health Care Policy, and Aging Research. The degree of impairment associated with both conditions is highly variable. Their etiologies are unknown, though the prevalence of ASD has increased 10-fold in the last decade, Dr. Gerhard said. Treatment typically includes behavioral, educational, and pharmacologic components. A lack of understanding about the characteristic use of medications to treatment ASD led Dr. Gerhard to sift through data from the National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey and the National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey for answers. In combination, he said, they reflect the experience of 2 million visits involving autism or Asperger disorder annually. Data from 2002 to 2005 revealed variations, though no statistically significant differences, in the demographics of autism and Asperger disorder patients. The average age of an autism patient was 9.7 years, compared with 11.1 years for an Asperger patient. Patients were overwhelmingly male and white. The presence of psychiatric comorbidities for autism and Asperger disorder were 36% and 44.4%, respectively. Disruptive behavioral disorders were involved with 3 of every 10 cases for each condition, Gerhard said. About 80% of children diagnosed with ASD were treated with at least 1 psychiatric drug. About 30% of patients were prescribed antipsychotic drugs, 40% antidepressants, 40% stimulants, and about 30% some other class of drug including mood stabilizers and anticonvulsants. Some patients are treated with several medications. Physicians tended to prescribe psychoactive drugs more often for Asperger disorder than autism (89% vs 64%). Differences in the treatment pattern were especially evident for the prescription of stimulants. About 57% of Asperger patients were prescribed stimulants compared with 20% of Autism patients. However, these results apply to the prescription pattern before US Food and Drug Administration approval of the antipsychotic drug risperidone in 2006. Session moderator W. Rutherford, MD, professor of epidemiology at the University of California, San Francisco, told Medscape Pediatrics that the data suggest an evolution toward a de facto standard for treating ASD. " If you are looking to see what your colleagues are doing, there is a tendency to treat a large portion of these patients with psychotropic drugs, " he said in an interview. The findings suggest to Dr. Gerhard that more research is needed to determine whether the drug prescription pattern reflects the clinical efficacy of the agents or an effort to placate parents who demand aggressive treatment. " As with many psychiatric conditions in children, we really know very little [about] how these drugs actually work and how they should be used in practice, " Dr. Gerhard said. " This is really a first step in research that should ultimately motivate more research. " American Academy of Pediatrics 2007 National Conference and Exhibition. Presented October 28, 2007. www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20071030.wautism30/BNStory/speci alScienceandHealth/home Autism groups support earlier screening Globe & Mail October 30, 2007 by Unnati Gandhi : Canadian autism groups are putting their weight behind an American call for universal screening for the disorder, but pediatricians here are wary of the realistic benefits of doing so. The split comes as the American Academy of Pediatrics at its annual meeting in San Francisco yesterday made its strongest push to date to screen every child twice for autism by the age of 2, warning of symptoms such as failure to babble at nine months and one-year-olds who don't point to toys. The advice is meant to help both parents and doctors spot the disorder sooner. And while there is no cure, experts say that early therapy can lessen its severity. " Absolutely, we need a screening procedure in place, " said Margaret Spoelstra, executive director of Autism Ontario, adding there is currently no standard screening practice in place in Canada. " To screen means that we're simply casting the net more widely in order to determine who might have autism out there. For us, it's better to have some false positives than to miss kids. " But too many false positives is precisely where the problem lies in practice, according to a leading Montreal pediatrician, because that would overload a system that is already strained. Going from a screening to therapy requires a multidisciplinary team of specialists who can properly diagnose the disorder, said Emmett Francoeur, director of the child development program at the Montreal Children's Hospital and former president of the Canadian Paediatric Society. But the waiting list for such an evaluation is as long as a year in some parts of Canada. " We know that the earlier you diagnose them, the better the outcome. That we're pretty sure of, " he said last night. " Unfortunately, unlike a broken bone or pneumonia, where you can take an X-ray and come up with a diagnosis, it takes multiple observers looking at multiple aspects of a child's development to diagnose autism. " So, he said, if screening were to be increased, that would mean an increase in the number of evaluation teams and the amount of services for treatment - all of which are not currently feasible. " Should all of this be done? I think so, if you're talking about the moral aspects of trying to help every possible child who has autism, " Dr. Francoeur said. " Can it be done? It's a really tough question because the governments have to decide where to put all their money. " As for screening, Dr. Francoeur stressed that there are several methods that are used, but only a few are accurate enough to warrant widespread promotion. The two American Academy of Pediatrics reports, which will appear in the November issue of the journal Pediatrics, list numerous warning signs, such as a four-month-old not smiling at the sound of mom or dad's voice, or the loss of language or social skills at any age. The academy's renewed effort reflects growing awareness since its first autism guidelines in 2001. A 2006 policy statement urged autism screening for all children at their regular doctor visits at 18 months and 24 months. The authors caution that not all children who display a few of these symptoms are autistic and they said parents shouldn't overreact to quirky behaviour. The new reports say children with suspected autism should start treatment even before a formal diagnosis. They also warn parents about the special diets and alternative treatments endorsed by celebrities, saying there's no proof that those work. With a report from Associated Press ************************************************************ National Vaccine Information Center email: news@... voice: 703-938-dpt3 web: http://www.nvic.org NVIC E-News is a free service of the National Vaccine Information Center and is supported through membership donations. NVIC is funded through the financial support of its members and does not receive any government subsidies. Barbara Loe Fisher, President and Co- founder. Learn more about vaccines, diseases and how to protect your informed consent rights at www.nvic.org -------------------------------------------------------- Sheri Nakken, former R.N., MA, Hahnemannian Homeopath Vaccination Information & Choice Network, Nevada City CA & Wales UK Vaccines - http://www.wellwithin1.com/vaccine.htm Email classes start in November Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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