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Category : English

Autism Community Reels: Three Drowning Deaths in One Week

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The autism community is reeling with the news that three autistic children have drowned in just over a week. These tragic deaths highlight the need for more and better research into the issue of autistic wandering, more properly termed “elopement.”

Mikaela Lynch, 9, went missing on Mother’s Day. Her body was found three days later in a creek near her family’s Lake County, California, vacation home. Owen Black, 8, went missing in Perdido, Florida on Friday, May 17. His body was found two days later, in the Gulf of Mexico, a half-mile from where he went missing. On Saturday, May 18, 2-year-old Drew Howell wandered away from his family’s cottage. His family found him almost immediately, but it was too late: he had drowned in a nearby creek, about 100 yards away from the cottage.

When autistic kids wander, it’s not the same as what most people would call “running away.” The word “wandering” also kind of misses the point: autistic wandering isn’t just aimless wandering around; it’s an attempt to get to something or away from something. Elopement can occur for lots of different reasons, such as the child feeling overwhelmed and stressed. It can also just happen, for reasons not apparent to everyone else–but nevertheless important to the person doing the wandering.

A 2012 report by the Kennedy Krieger Institute found than nearly half of children with Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASDs) will elope. The problem is, that report was based on a parent survey, not a real, scientific study–so we really have no idea how prevalent autistic wandering is. Nor do we have any frame of reference for spectrum of elopement–how frequently does a child elope? How far does she usually go? Where does he go, and how much danger is he in? And most importantly, what triggers the elopement?

What we have is simply anecdotal evidence, and it’s not enough.


Author: Joslyn Gray | babble

Study: Minority Students Less Like to Be Identified With Autism

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The rates of autism for students of all races is on the increase, but students who are black, Hispanic, or American Indian are less likely to be identified with the disability compared to white and Asian students, according to a study published this month in The Journal of Special Education.

The study, “A Multiyear National Profile of Racial Disparity in Autism Identification,” compiled information collected by the federal government from 1998 to 2006 on the race and disability category of students in special education. Using that information, the researchers were able to calculate a “risk index,” or the percentage of all enrolled students from a racial group with a specific disability.

The overall risk of being categorized as having autism increased for all racial groups over that time period, from 0.09 percent to 0.37 percent. That increase reflects the increase in autism prevalence.


Author: Christina Samuels | Education Week

State’s Autism Supervisor eliminated, Parents speak out

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Four year old Courtney loves everything about the playground…From the slide…To the swing.

And Courtney’s mother loves the progress her Autistic daughter is making.

“She’s forming her own sentences and, I can’t tell you how huge that is for a mother. And I just can’t imagine other parents not getting that opportunity. And I think if we lose these people they are trying to lay-off, they’re going to miss out,” said Courtney’s mother Lacey Bourque.

She’s concerned about her daughter’s progression without an Autistic Supervisor. Parents of Autistic children are upset about recent lay-offs in Louisiana’s Department of Education. Fifty-six positions have been cut, one being the state’s Autistic Supervisor.


Author: Allison Bourne-Vanneck |

Giant Steps’ Canopy program serves adults with autism

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Last spring, Giant Steps, a school for autism, developed a model program designed for the undeserved adults population.

With the rate of autism growing, the demand for services increases. Giant Steps Canopy program is starting to fulfill those needs.

Located in Lisle, Giant Steps has been educating children from pre-school to high school for 11 years.

“The day they turn 22 services are cut off and the child, the adult is required to stay home,” Bridgette O’Connor, president and CEO at Giant Steps, said. “There are a lot of development disabilities programs but there was nothing Autism specific and without knowledge of Autism we took all of those tools and all those components and developed Canopy.”


Author: Karen Meyer | ABC 7 News

AUTISM: I DON’T LIKE THAT WORD

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The point being, everyone has words they find distasteful. They may be profane words, or racial epithets. They may be less than kind words describing persons with disabilities. They may be anti-woman, anti-religion or anti-lifestyle. However, even when exposed to words we find revolting we are able to turn away or turn a deaf ear and carry on.

Such is not the case for my son with autism. There are certain words that when used, drive him to meltdown.


Author: Pamela Mari | World Autism Community

FDA approves first study on ecstasy-assisted therapy for social anxiety in autistic adults

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The U.S. Federal Drug Administration in late April approved a study to examine whether the drug ecstasy could help autistic adults suffering from social anxiety. But the first-of-its-kind study still has some hurdles to jump over before it can begin.

“The study could start enrolling subjects in several months,” Brad Burge, the communications director at Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies (MAPS), told Raw Story.

“However, it could be six months or more depending on how long the [Institutional Review Board] review process takes, how long it takes to set up the study site at the Harbor-UCLA Medical Center/Los Angeles Biomedical Research Institute, how long it takes to recruit subjects, and other factors. I estimate it will be four to eight months.”

Ecstasy, known scientifically as N-methyl-3,4-methylenedioxyamphetamine (MDMA), has the reputation of being a raver’s drug of choice. Due to its wanton use at electronic dance parties, MDMA was classified as a Schedule I controlled substance in 1985, a category reserved for dangerous drugs with no medical value.


Author: Eric W. Dolan | The Raw Story

How an Entirely New, Autistic Way of Thinking Powers Silicon Valley

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Reading an interview with Steve Jobs, I came across this quote: “The thing I love about Pixar is that it’s exactly like the LaserWriter.” What? The most successful animation studio in recent memory is “exactly like” a piece of technology from 1985?

He explained that when he saw the first page come out of Apple’s LaserWriter — the first laser printer ever — he thought, There’s awesome amounts of technology in this box. He knew what all the technology was, and he knew all the work that went into creating it, and he knew how innovative it was.

But he also knew that the public wasn’t going to care about what was inside the box. Only the product was going to matter — the beautiful fonts that he made sure were part of the Apple aesthetic. This was the lesson he applied to Pixar: You can use all sorts of new computer software to create a new kind of animation, but the public isn’t going to care about anything except what’s on the screen.

He was right, obviously. While he didn’t use the terms picture thinker and pattern thinker, that’s what he was talking about. In that moment in 1985, he realized that you needed pattern thinkers to engineer the miracles inside the box and picture thinkers to make what comes out of the box beautiful.


Author: Temple Grandin And Richard Panek | Wired