|
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, February 9, 2007; Page
A06
Approximately one in every 150 children in the United States has autism or a
closely related disorder -- a figure higher than most recent estimates --
according to a federal survey released yesterday, the most thorough ever
conducted.
The new data, from 14 states, do not mean that autism is on the rise, because
the criteria and definitions used were not the same as those used in the
past.
But the sheer number of children apparently affected -- 560,000 nationwide if
the new statistics are extrapolated to all 50 states -- makes autism an "urgent
public health issue" and a "major public health concern," said Marshalyn
Yeargin-Allsopp, chief of the developmental disabilities branch of the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention, which conducted the survey.
The prevalence of autism, a poorly understood behavioral syndrome that
interferes with a child's ability to relate to or interact with others, varies
mysteriously from state to state in the survey, with New Jersey standing out as
a hot spot and Alabama and West Virginia having low rates. West Virginia,
however, appeared to tally a significant increase from 2000 to 2002, the two
years for which data have been compiled so far. Most of the other states showed
no change in that period.
The survey, which is to be updated regularly, offers no clues about what
causes autism or the range of related disorders that together cost the nation
tens of billions of dollars a year and take an immeasurable emotional toll on
families.
In particular, it sheds no light on the controversial claim that trace
amounts of mercury in childhood vaccines are behind the growing number of
diagnoses in recent decades. The survey data may help settle that question in
future years, because most vaccines have recently eliminated the ingredient.
The survey does provide an unequaled, standardized baseline measure of the
prevalence and distribution of autistic behaviors around the country, CDC
officials said. In the short term, that can help state and federal officials
budget their special education and mental health services needs. Over the longer
term, it may tell at last whether autism is becoming more common and, if so,
why.
"We need to do our best to get a better understanding of how many children
are affected," said Catherine Rice, a CDC behavioral scientist and a senior
author of the new report, published in today's issue of the agency's Morbidity
and Mortality Weekly Report.
The results are the first to come out of the CDC's Autism and Developmental
Disabilities Monitoring Network, launched in 2000. That program aims to get the
most accurate statistics possible on the prevalence of autistic behaviors by
collecting information on thousands of children from schools, medical clinics
and social service providers.
Past estimates have varied because there is no simple test to provide a
definitive diagnosis and because the behavioral measures used to define the
syndrome have changed over time.
Today, the definition encompasses a wide range of children, some "fully
disabled" and others who "have something that is much more mild and can attend
school but may have some social disability," said Thomas R. Insel, director of
the National Institute of Mental Health.
Insel said he was "not surprised" by the new numbers, given recent estimates
that ranged from one in 150 children to about one in 170.
He emphasized that the new numbers may not reflect the true incidence of the
syndrome because they are derived not from clinical exams but from descriptive
reports provided by teachers and others, which were reviewed by experts for key
words that suggested a diagnosis of autism, Asperger syndrome or any of several
related disorders.
The CDC is comparing selected survey cases with data collected from medical
exams to test the accuracy and validity of the survey's impressions.
By applying a standardized methodology across the nation year after year,
Insel said, the CDC survey promises to tell a lot about autistic behaviors in
the United States.
The survey looks at records of 8-year-olds, the age by which the vast
majority of autistic children are diagnosed. Alison Singer, senior vice
president of New York-based Autism Speaks, an advocacy group that funds about
$30 million in research, said the survey pulls back the veil on the huge toll
autism is taking in America.
"We need to remember that behind every one of these one in 150 is a family,"
said Singer, the mother of a 9-year-old autistic girl. She said Congress should
take heed and fund the Combating Autism Act it passed in December, which
authorized $945 million in research and other funds over five years.
"That money has to get into the hands of the researchers," Singer said, "so
we can find a cause and understand what is fueling this high prevalence."
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/02/08/AR2007020801883.html
See also:
|