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vermontsavant
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31 Dec 2019, 9:46 am

I have heard autistic people have high rates of cancer and heart disease,that could also be because they don't do a good job checking in with doctors preventive types of check ups and such.


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kraftiekortie
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31 Dec 2019, 9:54 am

Autism, by itself, doesn’t reduce life expectancy.

Various psychological, genetic, chromosomal co-morbids could very well reduce life expectancy.

I would not tell him people they have a reduced life expectancy due only to autism. Because that would be incorrect.

Somebody with Down Syndrome and autism has a slightly reduced life expectancy. Though that is increasing.

Someone with depression and autism might have a reduced life expectancy.

Or somebody with reduced access to optimum medical services.

But to tell an autistic person he/she inevitably has a reduced life expectancy is wrong.



Last edited by kraftiekortie on 31 Dec 2019, 10:00 am, edited 1 time in total.

ASPartOfMe
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31 Dec 2019, 9:55 am

People with autism are 'dying younger,' warns study

Quote:
People with autism are dying earlier than the general population," BBC News reports.

A recent study in Sweden showed the average age of death for a person with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is 54 years, compared with 70 for matched controls.

The study used records of 27,122 people diagnosed with ASD to look at how long they lived, what the main causes of death were, and how their chances of death were affected by whether they were male or female and the type of autism they had.

For the purposes of the study, ASD was split into two categories: low-functioning ASD, where a person with ASD also had learning difficulties, and high-functioning ASD, where a person with ASD had average or above average intelligence.

Researchers then compared them with an age- and gender-matched sample from the general Swedish population.

The researchers found all groups of people with ASD were 2.5 times more likely to have died during the study than people without.

The highest risk seemed to be in people with low-functioning ASD – particularly women, who had almost nine times the mortality risk of women the same age without ASD.

Leading causes of death included neurological disorders such as epilepsy, which has previously been linked with ASD, and suicide. People with high-functioning ASD had a ninefold increased suicide risk.

The study was carried out by researchers from Sweden's Karolinska Institutet and was funded by Stockholm County Council, Karolinksa Institutet, and the Swedish Research Council.

It was published in the peer-reviewed British Journal of Psychiatry.

The Guardian, Mail Online, The Daily Telegraph and BBC News covered the study primarily as part of stories covering the launch of a campaign by the charity Autistica.

The campaign has called for more research into the causes of death among people with autism and the need for action to address the situation.

The media coverage was accurate and contained useful quotes from independent experts.

This was a case-control study, where records of people diagnosed with ASD were "matched" with those of similar people without a diagnosis of ASD. Case-control studies can show up differences between groups of people, but can't tell us what's behind those differences.

Researchers took records of all 27,122 people diagnosed with ASD in Sweden between 1987 and 2009. They matched each person to up to 100 people from the Swedish general population who were the same age, sex and country of origin, but without ASD.

The researchers used the records to compare people's chances of having died during the study period and having died of specific causes.

The records came from Sweden's national databases. Researchers included Asperger's syndrome, autism and pervasive developmental disorder as ASD.

The three categories are essentially based on intelligence, Asperger's being at the top of the scale and pervasive developmental disorder at the bottom.

People were categorised as having low-functioning ASD if they also had a learning disability. Otherwise, they were seen as having high-functioning ASD.

Researchers first calculated the overall chances of death (mortality) for all people with ASD, compared with all people without. They then looked at the results separately for people with low-functioning and high-functioning ASD, and for men and women.

They also looked separately at the chances of people with ASD having died from different categories of causes of death:

infections
cancers
hormonal disorders
mental and behavioural disorders
diseases of the nervous system, circulatory system, respiratory system, or genitourinary system
birth defects
external causes, with self-harm or suicide recorded separately

Overall, people with ASD were 2.56 times more likely to have died during the study period than people without (odds ratio [OR] 2.56, 95% confidence interval [CI] 2.38 to 2.76). The average age of death for people with ASD was 53.87 years, compared with 70.2 years for people without.

These stark figures break down to give some even more worrying numbers. People with low-functioning ASD on average died before they reached 40, at 39.5 years.

Overall, people with low-functioning ASD had a higher risk of having died – a more than fivefold risk, compared with a twofold risk for people with high-functioning ASD.

Women with low-functioning ASD had the highest risk of any group – an eightfold higher risk of death than a woman the same age without ASD.

Apart from infections, people with ASD were more likely than those without to have died from any of the causes of death considered. However, the two causes that stand out are suicide and epilepsy.

People with ASD were 7.55 times more likely to die by suicide. People with high-functioning ASD were at greater risk of suicide than low-functioning groups, and – unusually – women were more at risk than men. In the general population, rates of suicide are 3.5 times higher in men compared with women.

Deaths as a result of nervous system disorders – primarily epilepsy – were 7.49 times higher among those with ASD, and people with low-functioning ASD were most at risk.


The researchers said: "Our observation of excess cause-specific mortality in individuals with ASD may signify a generally increased biological vulnerability in ASD, as well as insufficient awareness, diagnoses and treatment of comorbid diseases within the healthcare system."

In other words, people with autism may be more vulnerable to getting certain diseases that can lead to death, and doctors may not be as good at diagnosing and treating diseases in people with ASD.

Looking at suicide as one example, the researchers suggested that people with ASD may be at more risk of getting depression, but also may be less likely to be diagnosed with depression and have support networks in place to help them with mental illness. This means they may be more likely to take their own lives rather than be successfully treated.

These are distressing figures for anyone with ASD, and their friends and families. But we need to remember what the figures actually represent: people with ASD in this Swedish population sample had an increased risk of dying during follow-up relative to the people without ASD.

These results do not mean that people with ASD have the certainty of a shortened life. Average figures don't tell you about what will happen to one individual.

Although some previous studies showed that people with ASD have a higher risk of dying sooner than those who do not have the condition, they were too small to look at the detail of the causes of death and the differences between men and women, as well as between people with high-functioning and low-functioning autism.

This study is big and based on reliable databases. However, because of the way that ASD was recorded in Sweden before 2001, it may represent more people with severe autism than in the average population.

People were only added to the record if they had been in contact with clinical psychiatric services. People with less severe autism may not have had a diagnosis recorded.

At present, we don't know enough to say what causes the increased chances of death for people with ASD. We don't know exactly what causes ASD, which makes it hard to see how possible causes, such as genes, might affect both the chances of getting ASD and of getting other conditions that can affect the length of your life.

Given that the chances of death were raised from almost all causes, it seems likely there could be a mixture of reasons for the increased risk. These could lie within ASD and other conditions that may be associated with it, and possibly also within society and the healthcare system.

For example, social and communication difficulties may mean that people with ASD have more difficulty accessing healthcare or discussing health problems, signs and symptoms with doctors.

Ultimately, we need much more research about why these shocking differences in lifespan occur and what can be done to address them.

Analysis by Bazian
Edited by NHS Website


Bolding=Mine


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“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


Last edited by ASPartOfMe on 31 Dec 2019, 11:48 am, edited 3 times in total.

kraftiekortie
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31 Dec 2019, 9:58 am

Sharon:

I went to a special school for kids with all sorts of disabilities from 2nd to 5th grades. I was placed on an academic track. I received no supports at all, except for reduced class size. I was expected to behave like a “normal” kid.

If you want to PM me, that would be cool.



Last edited by kraftiekortie on 31 Dec 2019, 10:10 am, edited 1 time in total.

Fnord
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31 Dec 2019, 10:00 am

vermontsavant wrote:
I have heard autistic people have high rates of cancer and heart disease,that could also be because they don't do a good job checking in with doctors preventive types of check ups and such.
I have heard that autistic people are the next stage in human evolution; that we are all extremely bright, precocious children with an amazing memory and a strong desire to live instinctively; that we are children of the next millennium; that we are all sensitive, gifted souls with an evolved consciousness who have come here to help change the vibrations of our lives and create one land, one globe and one species; and that we are humanity's bridge to the future.

But just hearing something (or believing/feeling/thinking it) does not make it true.



James_Ladrang
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31 Dec 2019, 10:15 am

Not sure how, but I too have survived. One of my big hopes is for death after life and since my diagnosis in 2015 I've had my eyes opened to that being a real possibility.
Happy New Year everyone.



kraftiekortie
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31 Dec 2019, 10:39 am

Happy New Year to you.

I wish there was life after death, and the opportunity to apply my lessons in my second life that I learned in my first life.



ASPartOfMe
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02 Jan 2020, 2:54 am

Link to thread for Journaled study which interviewed people diagnosed over age 50


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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