Wallourdes wrote:
Dr. Young Shin Kim is on the payroll of Autism Speaks (
link)
Money is influence, thus I doubt the reliability of the research done.
Correct me if I'm wrong but the article states that Dr Young Shin Kim is an epidemiologist from the Yale Child Study Center that received a research grant from Autism Speaks; Autism Speaks funds all research with research grants that cover the expenses of the research. Technically Dr. Young Shin Kim is on the payroll of the Yale Child Study Center.
I found it interesting in your link how the initial results were one out of every 100 to 200 children with Autism. I wonder what happened to make the percentage go up like it did to 1 out of 38.
It does make sense though that more kids would be diagnosed if they were all screened. That doesn't happen now, but there is aa new screening test, also funded in part by Autism Speaks, that is a simple checklist that a parent or physician can do in five minutes to suggest whether further diagnosis is needed in children as young as age 1.
Current statistics estimate close to 1 in 350 people have Aspergers, but I would imagine that a much larger number of people, particularly adults with limited resources are not aware of the condition and do not have the resources required for a diagnosis.
I had the developmental delay and was able to cope for the most part, but the world wasn't nearly as stressful and complicated in te 60's, at least were I lived. I imagine there are many now in middle age having a tougher time dealing with the speed of life, and not understanding why some things are harder for them than others.
Regarding the question on why the research wasn't done in the US first, Autism Speaks funds research and collects funding on a world wide basis. It is a very complex organization.