Autism Science Foundation Weekly Science Report
Latest Episodes
Managing autism practice from a distance: it’s called ECHO
Extension for Community Healthcare Outcomes (ECHO) pairs specialist centers with community providers to help them manage cases and empower them with knowledge to help their patients locally. It is done over the computer,
Our 1 in 54 need more
On Thursday the 26th, the Centers for Disease Control released new prevalence numbers: the prevalence of ASD has jumped from 1 in 59 to 1 in 54 kids who are 8. They also revealed prevalence numbers in 4 year olds. On this week’s podcast.
Telehealth: does it work?
This week’s podcast is focused on a topic many of you may be learning about now: Telehealth. This is remote delivery of care through the telephone or a video chat. If your healthcare appointment has not been cancelled, it’s been moved to Telehealth.
Getting through the COVID-19 scare
These are extraordinary times. We all need to lean into each other and help each other out during this emergency. Today’s podcast is a list of good advice and ideas that we have pulled from various sources,
Autism treatments are not the same, even in animals
This week the media over-hyped a publication on a potential link between Alzheimer’s and Autism Spectrum Disorder. However, this new study did identify a new treatment target for some forms of ASD. Not all forms, but some forms.
Psychiatric decompensation and autism: Two words you never want to hear together
A series of three scientific articles explore the link between the onset of psychiatric symptoms in adolescence in people with Phelan McDermid Syndrome, or PMS. PMS is caused by a mutation in the SHANK3 gene, leading to a wide range of medical,
“ASADHD” – where does ASD and ADHD join together, and go their separate ways?
One the surface, symptoms of ADHD and ASD may seem very similar. However, they come from very different places. The genetic and behavioral makeup may be on the same spectrum across the two disorders, but they are actually farther apart than you might...
This one’s for the girls
In this week’s podcast, I semi-plagiarize from a recent summary of sex differences in ASD, written by Drs. Meng-Chuan Lai and Peter Szatmari from the University of Toronto. They delve into why more males are diagnosed with females,
What works and does not work for wandering and sleep
This week a new study showed that kids with autism wander as early as toddlers, so parents keep a close eye on your kids no matter what their age. Medications do not work, but behavioral interventions do seem to help.
Genes genes all in an order, the ones you have, the greater risk of disorder
This week, a special focus on genetics: what type, where do they come from, what do these genes do and how do they influence risk of a wide array of psychiatric issues including autism. The results come from the largest study to date of people with a...