Guest guest Posted July 29, 2004 Report Share Posted July 29, 2004 http://www.clickondetroit.com/health/3593073/detail.html In the spring, at an open house at a suburban Detroit OT/PT/speech therapy facility (the open house was because Carol Kranowitz was in town), I talked AT LENGTH to the staff from the DIC (Detroit Institute for Children), including the DIRECTOR Eileen Donovan MD,PT, and the nurse on her staff. They said they are NOT seeing autism in the city like we are out in the burbs, and the NURSE said SHE thinks its because those inner city parents tend not to vaccinate their children until they HAVE to for KINDERGARTEN, thereby bypassing the critical time of the developing nervous system. Fast forward to tonight: I got a call this evening from a pediatric ophthalmologist from Children's Hospital in Detroit named Roarty MD, (long, long story, about my quest to learn more about vision therapy and why no one will back it or cover it, which I will skip), and the conversation turned to vaccines. I told him what that nurse said to me back in the spring. He said that someone at U of M School of Public Health should do an epidemiological study about what the nurse said, and see if she's right. Are autism rates truly lower in the city of Detroit? Are parents waiting until much much later to vaccinate their children? And if Record numbers of children ARE vaccinated, would we be able to see that difference in the big cities, where parents might not have insurance to cover vaccinations, and thus postpone them as long as possible? Food for thought. Has anyone done studies on this? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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