Autism prevalence much higher - immigrant children in Norway
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Researchers are not sure what can explain these trends, but the findings suggest that the mothers’ immigrant backgrounds could impact the cognitive development of their children somehow — how exactly remains to be seen.
Compared to other countries, Norway has a very robust program for infant health care, which monitors the development of young children up to five years old regardless of their socioeconomic or ethnic background. So, for instance, if a child has difficulty speaking at ages 2-4, the case can be flagged for subsequent screening for ASD.
The study analyzed anonymized patient records for 142 children diagnosed with ASD between 2016 and 2019 in Sør-Trøndelag, which likely represent most if not all autistic children who were given a formal diagnosis during these years.
Researchers found that 0.74% of children in Sør-Trøndelag whose parents immigrated to Norway were diagnosed with ASD, compared to just 0.1% of children whose mothers had a Norwegian background. The children whose mothers had a foreign background also scored higher on an autism diagnosis test, averaging a score of 19 compared to 15.3 for children with ASD born to Norwegian mothers.
The seven to one ratio is puzzling, to say the least. It suggests an overdiagnosis of ASD children born to immigrant mothers, and an underdiagnosis of ASD children with Norwegian mothers, or quite possibly both. But the authors of the study point out that the deviations from neurotypical behavior are quite obvious, and the heightened risk of autism for children born to immigrant mothers can also explain why their symptoms are more severe.
Another study reviewed patient data on nearly 5,000 children with ASD in Sweden. One in five had both parents born outside Sweden, most of whom hailed from Africa, western Asia, and northern Europe. Higher rates of autism with intellectual disability were found to be among children of parents who had come to Sweden from resource-poor countries.
To this day, most research on autism focuses on mostly white and middle-class families. Since it’s critical that kids with ASD get diagnosed early and gain access to high-quality treatment, an immigrant background could be more closely watched in the future, as far as autism diagnosis goes.
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Professionally Identified and joined WP August 26, 2013
DSM 5: Autism Spectrum Disorder, DSM IV: Aspergers Moderate Severity
“My autism is not a superpower. It also isn’t some kind of god-forsaken, endless fountain of suffering inflicted on my family. It’s just part of who I am as a person”. - Sara Luterman
I find lack of a link to the study frustrating as I would like to read the researchers' discussion of the results, methods and any limitations they could postulate on the significance or otherwise of the findings.
Limitations and cautions occuring to me are : Sample size of only 142 people in total.
As diagnosis at these stages makes much use of observation of how the person acts, communicates etc, how many observed differences may be a result of an Autistic cognitive profile as opposed to, for example adapting to a society with perhaps very different conventions of courtesy, interaction in general which may appear as the " Deficit in Communication" in diagnostic criteria.
Which repetitive behaviour/ actions observed would be from an underlying Autistic profile and which might be just a sign of high anxiety from being in a situation which is unfamiliar or stressful over long term.
A possible factor around settling into a new country may be a general wariness about standing out, drawing unkind or hostile attention and how much of such may be communicated consciously or unconsciously parents to children
Or actually made into instructions or rules by anxious parents placed on children:" Don't draw attention to yourself. Only speak when you are spoken to" etc.
Lots of possible confounding factors which in a small sample size could mean applicability of the result is limited, perhaps to a reason to repeat with s much larger sample.
I doubt that Norwegian immigration conditions have a great impact on this.
Skilled immigrants from relatively backward places mean that they are the local selected technical elite - which overlaps with autistic tendencies.
This is like the connection between Silicon Valley and more autistic children.
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With the help of translation software.
Cover your eyes, if you like. It will serve no purpose.
You might expect to be able to crush them in your hand, into wolf-bone fragments.
I doubt that Norwegian immigration conditions have a great impact on this.
Skilled immigrants from relatively backward places mean that they are the local selected technical elite - which overlaps with autistic tendencies.
This is like the connection between Silicon Valley and more autistic children.
I was imagining the immigrants to be desperate refugees fleeing war and starvation in Syria, or Somalia, or Yemen. And then facing stress and racial descrimination in Europe.
But you're saying that they are not refugees, but part of the brain drain.
Your picture of the situation might be more accurate. They maybe the children of resident aliens already living comfortably, and earning high salaries in Norway (before being granted citizenship) because they were invited to work in Norway because they are mega geniuses with talents Norway is desperate for (its the host country not the immigrants who are desperate). And these uber geeks from the third world marry each other, or marry local Norwejian uber geeks, and they produce...uber uber uber geek kids- who make Sheldon Leonard look like a model of neurotypicality!
Interesting alternate theory.
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