October 5, 2009

Autism Strikes 1 in 100 Children, According to Parent Survey

Autism strikes 1in 100 kids.


(From NPR Health)  How many kids have autism or related disorders? Ask parents, as federal researchers did recently, and you come up an estimate of about 1 in 100, a figure quite a bit higher than the 1-in-150 estimate from just a few years back. What do parents know? Well, the results from the telephone survey, published in the academic journal Pediatrics, are in line with some unpublished work by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The prevalence of autism spectrum disorders, comprising autism, Asperger disorder and other less specific diagnoses may be on the rise. The Pediatrics study's estimate of the raw data boiled down to 1 in 91 kids between 3 and 17 years old and 1 in 110 when adjusted for survey technicalities like cellphone vs. land-line use.
Some specifics: odds of autism spectrum disorder were four times greater for boys than girls. Non-Hispanic black and multiracial children had lower odds of ASD than non-Hispanic white kids. On the bright side, nearly 40% of children ever diagnosed with ASD didn't have trouble with it anymore, though it's not clear what that means exactly.

Overall, it's settled whether the apparent increase in ASD is a result of more diagnosis and reporting of problems or reflects a genuine rise in the disorders. "The concern here is that buried in these numbers is a true increase," Tom Insel, director of the National Institute of Mental Health, said Friday, according to USA Today. "We're not sure how big it is."

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.