Study: Autism May Be More Common Than Thought

109 95
Study: Autism May Be More Common Than Thought

Study: Autism May Be More Common Than Thought


Researchers Suggest Many Undiagnosed Kids Have Mild Autism

May 9, 2011 - A "startling" one in 38 children has autism, South Korean and U.S. researcher find.

The estimate is far higher than CDC's estimate of one in 110 children, as the study found many school kids have mild, undiagnosed autism.

The elaborate study searched for 7- to 12-year-old children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) among 55,000 children in a community outside Seoul, South Korea. Largely funded by the advocacy organization Autism Speaks, the study was led by Young Shin Kim, MD, PhD, MPH, of Yale University.

"They came up with the startling number that one in 38 children has an autism spectrum disorder," Geraldine Dawson, PhD, chief science officer for Autism Speaks, tells WebMD. "This raises an important question for the U.S.: How many kids in the general education classroom actually have an ASD but not a diagnosis? These children may have gone under the radar."

"This means that about two-thirds of children with ASD are in the community, unrecognized and untreated. Their lives can be improved significantly with early identification and intervention," Kim said at a news conference.

The new findings do not mean that more children have suddenly come down with autism.

"It seems they have been there all along but were not counted in previous studies," Kim says.

It's the first time a large study has screened a general population for autism. Autism expert Rebecca Landa, PhD, director of the autism center at Baltimore's Kennedy Krieger Institute, tells WebMD in an email that the study methods will have to be validated by future studies. Landa was not involved in the Kim study.

Kim agrees that further studies will have to confirm the current findings. Such studies are underway in India, South Africa, Mexico, and Taiwan.

Study researcher Bennett L. Leventhal, MD, of the NYU Child Study Center, thinks the same study methods would yield similar results in the U.S.

"If researchers went into the grade schools in their communities and looked there, we think they would come up with numbers similar to those we are reporting," Leventhal said at the news conference. "This means there are uncounted children who are not in the services system."
Source...
Subscribe to our newsletter
Sign up here to get the latest news, updates and special offers delivered directly to your inbox.
You can unsubscribe at any time

Leave A Reply

Your email address will not be published.