First large scale survey of adult Autistics done.
LINK
Interesting to note the the prevalence is almost identical, if not even more strong in the adult group.
Among the many great mysteries of autism is this: Where are all the adults with the disorder? In California, for instance, about 80% of people identified as having an autism spectrum disorder (ASD) are 18 or under. Studies by the Centers for Disease Control and Protection (CDC) indicate that about 1 in 150 children in the U.S. have autism, but despite the fact that autism is by definition a lifelong condition, the agency doesn't have any numbers for adults. Neither has anyone else. Until now.
On Sept. 22, England's National Health Service (NHS) released the first study of autism in the general adult population. The findings confirm the intuitive assumption: that ASD is just as common in adults as it is in children. Researchers at the University of Leicester, working with the NHS Information Center found that roughly 1 in 100 adults are on the spectrum - the same rate found for children in England, Japan, Canada and, for that matter, New Jersey.
This finding would also appear to contradict the commonplace idea that autism rates have exploded in the two decades. Researchers found no significant differences in autism prevalence among people they surveyed in their 20s, 30s, 40s, right up through their 70s. "This suggests that the factors that lead to developing autism appear to be constant," said Dr. Terry Brugha, professor of psychiatry at the University of Leicester and lead author of the study. "I think what our survey suggests doesn't go with the idea that the prevalence is rising."
In England, where there is widespread suspicion that the childhood vaccine for measles, mumps and rubella has led to an explosion in autism cases, the study was hailed as part of a growing body of evidence that the vaccine, which was introduced in the 1988, is not to blame.
Brugha's study was part of a larger national survey of psychiatric disorders among adults. In the first phase, researchers conducted 90-minute interviews with 7,461 people in 4,000 randomly selected British households; the interview included a 20-item questionnaire designed to screen for autism. (Sample yes-or-no questionnaire items: I find it easy to make friends. I would rather go to a party than the library. I particularly enjoy reading fiction.) Based on their answers in the first phase, investigators further assessed 618 individuals, using a battery of psychiatric measures, including a state-of-the art autism diagnostic tool. (About 200 of these participants had been selected for scoring high on the autism screen; the rest had been selected to sample for other disorders.) In the second phase, researchers identified 19 adults with ASD. But had they been able to evaluate all 7,461 in the survey, they estimate that they would have found 72 cases, or roughly 1% of the total.
One limitation of the study is its relatively small size, says Brugha. Being the first of its kind, it also needs to be confirmed by other studies. Another issue, notes Richard Roy Grinker, an autism researcher and professor of anthropology at George Washington University, who was not involved in the work, is that the study looked only at adults in the general population. Had it included people living in institutions, which is where the most severely autistic adults are likely to be, the estimated rate of ASD may have been even higher than 1%.
Michael Rosanoff, an epidemiology specialist with Autism Speaks, emphasizes that "the small sample size for estimating prevalence requires caution about interpreting this finding on a population-based scale."
Despite its limits, the new study does begin to fill in the profile of high-functioning adults who are on the spectrum but living in an ordinary home in the community. Researchers found that they are primarily male and unmarried: about 1.8% of men surveyed were on the spectrum - among never-married, single men, an estimated 4.5% had ASD - compared with just 0.2% of women. (Brugha notes, however, that autism screening tools may be poorly adapted for identifying autism in adult females.) People with autism are less likely than average to have finished college but about as likely to be employed. Only 0.2% of adults who had finished college were on the spectrum, but the rate was 10 times higher among those without a high school degree. And, in contrast with people with depression or anxiety disorders, autistic adults were unlikely be receiving any sort of mental health services.
Why has it taken so long to do a study of this sort? For one thing, you need an enormous sample size - at an enormous cost - to find significant numbers of people with autism. Second, it's more difficult to detect autism in adults than in children. Children often have glaring symptoms, like delays in learning to speak, extreme social withdrawal and terrible tantrums. Less is known about how autism looks in adults. "To diagnose autism, you need to have good information on people's behavior," says Brugha. "It's much more straightforward to get that with children because you've got parents and teachers as observers. Adults with autism are not the best people to describe their own behavior."
The Irish-born psychiatrist and epidemiologist says he sees a lot of adults with ASD in his own clinical practice, and "they have so much difficulty saying what their own difficulties are." He suspects that this lack of insight and inability to communicate emotional issues also reduces their ability to seek professional help.
Efforts to identify and help adults with ASD have lagged far behind efforts to help children. And yet, Brugha notes that just having an ASD diagnosis to explain their troubles can be enormously beneficial to his adult patients, who often struggle with relationships at home and at work because of difficulty reading social cues. "Once you help them to understand that they are not the only person on the planet who is like this, and help their families understand, it can be a breakthrough. People also have a better chance of staying in their work, if their employer understands why they are the way they are." Moreover, Brugha says it is not expensive to provide services to adults with relatively mild autism. "The cost of treating a child with autism is phenomenally high. We are not talking about this. We are talking about support, helping people adapt their lives" with help from a social worker.
Grinker, who has a teenage daughter with autism, finds the study to be in some ways comforting. "I would think that a study like this would encourage people that children with autism could grow up and have futures that are meaningful and that they are not going to end up in institutions."
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sinsboldly
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Interesting to note the the prevalence is almost identical, if not even more strong in the adult group.
back in the day, problematic infants, babies and children often allowed to become mortality statistics. I know it was a tradition in my own family.
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Awesome news article. We need more like it to help spread the right kinds of awareness. We've always been here, and always will be. Though, I do think that many of us HAVE sought psychiatric services, but they weren't helpful, because they weren't recognizing the root of our problem. I know that I was diagnosed with depressive disorders, and anxiety disorders, but it never quite fit, and never did help, so I just quit seeking any help at all. Until I discovered autism through my children's diagnosis' it seemed as if I was just defective.
Also, I highly recommend Dr. Grinker's book Unstrange Minds.
Interesting to note the the prevalence is almost identical, if not even more strong in the adult group.
back in the day, problematic infants, babies and children often allowed to become mortality statistics. I know it was a tradition in my own family.
That is... highly disturbing.
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Every time you think you've made it idiot proof, someone comes along and invents a better idiot.
?the end of our exploring, will be to arrive where we started, and know the place for the first time. - T.S. Eliot
Dr Terry Brugha diagnosed me.
It is a nice read and looking at my own family I've thought this for years. Only one of the many likely austic people in my family did not grow-up to funtion just find married with jobs and kid. With him it was the care he got from the doctors that caused him not to be able to grow in to a indenpent adult.
sinsboldly
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Interesting to note the the prevalence is almost identical, if not even more strong in the adult group.
back in the day, problematic infants, babies and children often allowed to become mortality statistics. I know it was a tradition in my own family.
That is... highly disturbing.
A lot of folks think leaving defective babies to die in the woods only happens in third world countries.. Kansas in the 50's, after the depression and the dust bowl was as third world as they come. My family was no different from the old traditions than any other. They put crazy old ladies in attics and the house down the street had the windows ply-wooded up and nails to keep the windows closed in the back bedroom where they kept their kid. Nobody did anything, cause they were 'taking care of their own.' It was just easier on the rest of the family if Janie or Johnnie met with an unfortunate accident early in life, is all, as there was all of the stigma and none of the help.
lots of us didn't make it through childhood, or were institutionalized or died homeless wandering the streets when Reagan closed the hospitals.
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So true Sinsboldly. Coincidentally, I just received this http://www.kansas.com/950/story/998403.html update about such matters on my facebook. The state is out of money. My kids are on the wait list numbers 455, and 456 for services. Big difference is that they aren't adults trying to fend for themselves. When I heard of the budget cuts, my heart sank for the thousands of adults that will be without assistance here, with nowhere else to turn.
richie
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Location: Lake Whoop-Dee-Doo, Pennsylvania
Interesting to note the the prevalence is almost identical, if not even more strong in the adult group.
back in the day, problematic infants, babies and children often allowed to become mortality statistics. I know it was a tradition in my own family.
That is... highly disturbing.
A lot of folks think leaving defective babies to die in the woods only happens in third world countries.. Kansas in the 50's, after the depression and the dust bowl was as third world as they come. My family was no different from the old traditions than any other. They put crazy old ladies in attics and the house down the street had the windows ply-wooded up and nails to keep the windows closed in the back bedroom where they kept their kid. Nobody did anything, cause they were 'taking care of their own.' It was just easier on the rest of the family if Janie or Johnnie met with an unfortunate accident early in life, is all, as there was all of the stigma and none of the help.
lots of us didn't make it through childhood, or were institutionalized or died homeless wandering the streets when Reagan closed the hospitals.
Things didn't improve much in the sixties and seventies, it took almost 20 years to finally shut down
Willowbrook. I was only one phone call or one signature away from being sent to that place. If I had been sent there I would have arrived just in time to fall into the loving hands of Dr. Saul Krugman who oversaw the hepatitis experiments that were being conducted there from 1963 to 1966.
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A group of doctors bullied my Great grandmother in to having a Lobotomy done on her oldest son because of what looks to me reading his records now to have been Asperger's. I try to keep this injustic in my mind now when dealing with doctors and my own sons care and never let them push me in to anything that I'm not 100% sure of.
sinsboldly
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In my employment I talk to the elderly and disabled that have medicare/medicaid. Gack, I can't even write about it. . .sorry, maybe later.
Merle
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In my employment I talk to the elderly and disabled that have medicare/medicaid. Gack, I can't even write about it. . .sorry, maybe later.
Merle
A lot of us here have Medicare/Medicaid. It sucks. Rumor has it that part of Obama's Medicare cuts will include taking away the prescription drug benefit, dumping millions back on the states. I get my meds through that program. The states are out of money! I may not get my meds!
sinsboldly
Veteran
Joined: 21 Nov 2006
Gender: Female
Posts: 13,488
Location: Bandon-by-the-Sea, Oregon
In my employment I talk to the elderly and disabled that have medicare/medicaid. Gack, I can't even write about it. . .sorry, maybe later.
Merle
A lot of us here have Medicare/Medicaid. It sucks. Rumor has it that part of Obama's Medicare cuts will include taking away the prescription drug benefit, dumping millions back on the states. I get my meds through that program. The states are out of money! I may not get my meds!
Actually, the health care deal the Democrats have with Big Pharma is for them to pay 50% of the perscriptions through the coverage gap (donut hole). This is phenomonal! I work with people that just don't take their medication the last three months of the year!
but the prior administration has already set it up for 2010 to reduce the payment of 4.5 to medicare reimbursement. It sucks to have to let people know they have a choice, food, heat or insurance premiums. . .
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