Expert Panel Withholds Support for Early Autism Screening

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tall-p
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03 Aug 2015, 8:26 pm

By RONI CARYN RABIN AUGUST 3, 2015 5:00 PM

For years experts have urged physicians to screen infants and toddlers for autism in order to begin treatment as early as possible. But now an influential panel of experts has concluded there is not enough evidence to recommend universal autism screening of young children.

The findings, from a draft proposal by the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force published Monday, are already causing consternation among specialists who work with autistic children.

“I was in a meeting when I read this, and I started feeling like I’d have chest pain,” said Dr. Susan E. Levy, a pediatrician who helped write the American Academy of Pediatrics guidelines urging universal screening of all babies, with standardized screening tools at both 18 and 24 months. “I would hate to see people stop screening.”

Dr. David Grossman, a pediatrician and vice chairman of the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, emphasized that the panel’s draft proposal was a call for more research and not intended to change practices. About half of all pediatricians routinely screen toddlers for autism.

“This doesn’t mean ‘don’t screen.’ ” Dr. Grossman said. “It means there is not enough evidence to make a recommendation.”

Dr. Grossman also noted that the panel’s conclusion applied only to routine screening of healthy children without symptoms. A child displaying symptoms associated with autism should always be evaluated, he said.

“If a parent comes in and says, ‘My child isn’t looking at me,’ that’s not a screening,” Dr. Grossman said. “You hear that as a doctor and you say, ‘That needs to be looked at,’ and you embark on a series of tests.”

Much more plus comments here>> http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2015/08/0 ... pe=article


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kraftiekortie
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03 Aug 2015, 8:57 pm

I never knew they even had "universal autism screening."

Now, this will put the onus more on the parents. And there might be doctors who don't want to screen for autism--the might believe, for example, that a child who does ANY kind of socializing is definitely not autistic.