Guest guest Posted August 31, 2004 Report Share Posted August 31, 2004 AMEN TRISH!!! COULDNT HAVE SAID IT BETTER MYSELF. > " Dr. Bryna Siegel, director of the autism clinic at UCSF, believes that > some children with speech and language disorders who aren't actually > autistic are being misdiagnosed. > > " I actually think the availability of treatment dollars is driving the > diagnosis, " Siegel said. " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 1, 2004 Report Share Posted September 1, 2004 We hear this again and again on this list, children are diagnosed with autism around age 2 or 3 and then when the speech starts falling into place, suddenly the child doesn't fit the autism diagnosis. My kid is one of them. He has PDD-nos on some of his medical paperwork from when he was young. Even now, his psychologist puts PDD on the paperwork so that she can continue to see him with no flack from the insurance company. This is exactly why we need more awareness about speech-language disorders! No one takes them seriously! Tricia Morin North Carolina Karyn wrote: " Dr. Bryna Siegel, director of the autism clinic at UCSF, believes that some children with speech and language disorders who aren't actually autistic are being misdiagnosed. " I actually think the availability of treatment dollars is driving the diagnosis, " Siegel said. " MY SENTIMENTS EXACTLY........if the kids are dx'd as autistic, there's more money to educate them. PLUS the huge lack of knowledge on what speech/language/motor planning disorders are, and how they present. If you get a dx of autistic spectrum disorder, and you do not agree.....get another opinion. ~karyn Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 1, 2004 Report Share Posted September 1, 2004 When I saw that article I was so glad that the misdiagnosing word is getting out a bit at a time - another article, another person realizing. I want to write the writer, email her a brief story of what happened to us, we got the autism label and went elsewhere to fight it, in the meantime what a view they had, the services they were offering were the wrong ones, we ended up going to a professional who also knew the misdiagnosing was happening and is a child's advocate thank goodness. My daughter doesn't have apraxia but she has expressive-receptive language delay and that is being misdiagnosed. We have to be the voice for our children. In time it is being heard! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 11, 2004 Report Share Posted September 11, 2004 can someone please post the article Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 12, 2004 Report Share Posted September 12, 2004 http://www.sanmateocountytimes.com/Stories/0,1413,87~11268~2342442,00 ..html Experts: Spike in autism could be anomaly By Fancher, STAFF WRITER As the number of children with autism in California continues to multiply, so too are the questions about what has caused the rise. Meantime, some health and education experts question the validity of the statistics that point to the increase in caseload. One in every 250 children in the state is autistic and from 1998 to 2002, the population of autistic children served by the state doubled. " It's significantly higher than we ever thought it would be 10 years ago, " said Ron Huff, senior psychologist for the California Department of Developmental Services. He said that Massachusetts and Atlanta have seen rises as well as countries such as Japan, Great Britain and Canada. A neurological disorder, autism comprises a spectrum of developmental problems that range from mild to severe, often marked by little or no speech, emotional volatility and poor social skills. Warych, a special education manager for the California Department of Education, said it's possible the rise is due to kids being misdiagnosed as autistic because they're speech impaired or emotionally disturbed. Dr. Bryna Siegel, director of the autism clinic at UCSF, believes that some children with speech and language disorders who aren't actually autistic are being misdiagnosed. " I actually think the availability of treatment dollars is driving the diagnosis, " Siegel said. Allan Lloyd-, special education consultant for the California Department of Education, believes that lumping Asbergers and Pervasive Developmental Disorders into autism figures has affected statistics. Ten years ago there were 4,394 autistic students in the state, now there are 24,943, but 10 years ago students with Aspergers and PDD weren't counted as autistic, he said. Hendren, executive director of the MIND Institute at UC , which was created by the California legislature to study the causes of autism, said that the rise may be due autistic children formerly being diagnosed as mentally disabled in the past. " We're diagnosing people differently now than we did 10, 20, 30 years ago, " he said. Another theory is that the rise is due to more autistic children moving to the state, but Hendren said there's no proof of this. Hendren said most researchers at MIND are studying a possible genetic link to the disorder but that an environmental factor may cause defective genes. There may also be a link to autoimmune function since one-third of families with an autistic child have a history of autoimmune problems. One possible theory is that vaccines with a preservative containing mercury or pollutants in the environment are causes. " Mercury is very toxic to the immune system and we have more in our environment now, " said Hendren, who has also been studying a synthetic compound in styrofoam, pesticides and other chemicals, he said. Francine Goodwin of Mountain View's son , 7, goes to Wings in San Mateo believes his autism may have been caused by the mercury in the vaccines given to her son. She's eager for researchers to find the cause, but no one can predict where that will be. " There's still a lot of research that has to be done, " said Huff. Mills-Faraudo contributed to this article. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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