Thoughts on the Autism Community's needs
I’d like to take a moment to offer some thoughts on the
written public comment submitted to this November 2015 meeting of the
Interagency Autism Coordinating Committee.
Prior to this meeting we received 71 comments, which are available
online at the IACC site, iacc.hhs.gov. This reflects the long time that has
passed since our last meeting.
The overriding theme of the comments is dissatisfaction at how
little we have accomplished. Every year we publish a summary of advances, but
very little of what we describe actually benefits families. Parents have seen
children grow to adulthood while we’ve delivered nothing new to help them. If you take away one thing from the comments
it would be this: We would be very wise
to significantly shorten our research-to-consumer translation timelines and
focus on therapies and treatments that will be impactful soon, not to the next
generation.
We’ve spent millions of dollars and years of time look for
the foundation causes of profound disability.
We’ve kept that primary course even with the emergence of knowledge that
autism is not a progressive disease, and for many of us, the cure model is not
applicable. Yet autistic people are stressed and suffering. What’s wrong with that picture? We need
research into benefits we can use now.
Research into relief of suffering from various causes, and
research into teaching accommodation skills is often fundamentally different from
basic research for a cure.
To draw an analogy, in the years after WWII, one group of
doctors studied the cause of polio, while another group developed better wheel
chairs and braces. Today, we recognize that both groups made great
contributions. Thanks to basic research,
polio is no longer an American public health problem, yet the accommodation
work the other less well-known doctors did finds even wider use today for other
disabilities. The same is likely true
for work to be done in autism accommodation.
The next point I’d like to speak to is the large group of
commenters who express the view that vaccines cause autism. In the previous IACC, when I saw the very
high percentage of vaccine commenters, I asked the committee if we have
research into what the concerns of autistic people and their families are.
Indeed we do have such research, and possible vaccine injury does not top the
list, even though it tops the list of comments here. Research shows us the main community concerns
are solving the problems autistic people and their families live with
today. Indeed, many commenters who raise
the vaccine issue also discuss quality of life concerns.
Several commenters describe autism as an emergent epidemic
or a fast-growing public health crisis. This
week we have a new National Health Statistics report that puts the prevalence
of autism at 2.25%, a striking rise from the 2013 estimate of 1.25%. But is that evidence of more autism? The authors of the study point out that the total
prevalence of all developmental differences was constant across survey
years. So the increase of autism reports
was matched by a decrease in other conditions.
In a similar vein, we have debated for years how much – if any – real
increase in autism exists, as compared to increased awareness and expanded
scope of definition. I think this is a
area for study but the most recent report is not in my opinion cause for alarm
as it probably represents a change in reporting, not a change in underlying
autism prevalence.
Recent studies like Brugha have shown a fairly constant
prevalence of autism in populations over the past 70 years, when everyone is
screened with the same current tools.
Those studies also highlight the many alternate diagnoses older autistics
were given, and the fact that many had no diagnoses at all. That said, those
studies do not rule out the possibility of some recent increase from other
causes, and when we look at the sharp rise in other childhood immune issues
like peanut allergy and bee sting toxicity we would be wise to keep an open
mind.
In the last IACC, we had a workshop on co-occurring
conditions. We recognized the reality
that some mix of anxiety, depression, intestinal distress, and seizures affects
the majority of autistic people – me included.
And there are other complications that are less universal but still
common. It’s time to address the reasons
those things occur so often in autistic people and do something about it.
I think we also need to be open minded about how we address
the myriad issues of autism. Some things will be best addressed by researching
a cure (for example – epilepsy and profound intellectual disability) while
other challenges (speech) may be addressed by technology as others (making
friends) are addressed through learning and therapy and some (GI for example)
may be addressed by diet and medication.
Societal accommodation also has a significant role.
Many commenters posit possible causes of autism – asphyxia
at birth, mercury in vaccines, other unspecified environmental toxins. At the same time, we confront research that
suggests that a substantial number of autistic people come by our autism
naturally, though inheritance of a stable set of genetic differences. How do we
balance those things? We have a very
polarized community with one extreme arguing that autism is a social problem
that primarily needs acceptance, and others arguing it is a medical crisis that
needs a cure. Might the spectrum contain elements of both? Part of finding
balance is recognizing that we are probably dealing with many different autisms,
or many foundations for similar observed behaviors.
As an autistic adult and member of this committee, I believe
we have a duty to identify and remediate all causes of neurological injury that
cause autism-like behaviors. I also
support the genetic and basic biological research but I want to be clear – I
see that standing beside a primary mission of research to maximize quality of
life for today’s autistic population. I
hope we can agree on the primacy of that mission.
We must recognize that taxpayers fund our work, and we are
morally responsible to heed their wishes when we spend their dollars. Those taxpayers want action now, and most of
our present research does not offer the potential to do that. We must shift a significant
part of our budget to development and deployment of therapies that will help in
three years, not thirty.
In the last IACC, I stressed the need to shift additional
focus to the issues of autistic adults.
Autism is a lifelong condition, yet our research is still almost
exclusively focused on children. At any
given time, two-thirds of the autistic population are adults and it’s high time
that group’s concerns were addressed. Why
are autistic adults at greater risk of mortality? What are we going to do to help the large
unemployed and underemployed autistic population find productive work? Can we adapt therapies that help teens make
friends to adults? Can we develop a
workable housing plan for when parents are gone? There are many, many questions
and few answers.
I believe another of our top priorities must be to address
causes of death from autism. With the
knowledge of today, those risks come in several forms:
-
Suicide, for bright socially isolated autistics
– particularly teens
-
Death by misadventure when more impaired
autistics wander and drown, or die in accidents
-
Death by neglect, when language impairments
prevent autistics from communicating life-threatening medical issues to
caregivers.
-
Death from complications of seizures.
There is another adult issue that needs to be addressed, and
that is respite care for families. The Internet is filled with stories of
exhausted parents who are pushed to the breaking point and beyond by the stress
of family autism.
Those of us who have the honor of serving on this committee
should recognize our duty to serve the entire autistic population – not just
the part of the spectrum that touches our own lives. In particular, I believe those of us with
strong voices have a duty to speak out for others who cannot express their own
concerns to this committee. The group
that best exemplifies this is our minimally verbal and non verbal autistic
population. As more and more autistic
self advocates speak out, I worry that those who cannot self advocate will be
forgotten. It’s up to us to ensure that
does not happen.
Parents of minimally verbal autistics live in fear for their
children when they are gone. They live
in fear for their children when they are out of their sight. They are right to be afraid, and it’s of
great concern to me that we have done so little for this group. Let’s be conscious of all autistics, not just
the ones who speak before us.
I believe this touches on a limitation of this committee and
the agencies that research autism.
Relief for minimally verbal people may not come through medical
science. Rather, it may come through the
work of engineers and others not traditionally associated with medical
research.
I’ve offered you a lot of thoughts in this
presentation. I hope you share my sense
of urgency as regards delivering help to families and autistic
individuals. I also hope you see that we
don’t have an all or nothing situation here.
It’s a question of balance, and pulling together.
At the same time I hope we can all push for a more accepting
and accommodating world. Neurodiversity initiatives
at schools like W&M are making higher education more accessible to autistic
people, and we are teaching all our students the value of autistic people. Employment initiatives like SAP and
Specialisterne are leading the way in employing autistic people in today’s high
tech world. I hope this is the start of
a much larger groundswell of support and acceptance.
John Elder Robison
JR note - This text follows my presentation fairly
closely. There is some material here
that I did not read to the group due to time constraint.
All words and images (c) 2015 John Elder Robison
John Elder Robison is an autistic adult and advocate for people with neurological differences. He's the author of Look Me in the Eye, Be Different, Raising Cubby, and the forthcoming Switched On. He's served on the Interagency Autism Coordinating Committee of the US Dept of Health and Human Services and many other autism-related boards. He's co-founder of the TCS Auto Program (A school for teens with developmental challenges) and he’s the Neurodiversity Scholar in Residence at the College of William & Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia.
The opinions expressed here are his own. There is no warranty expressed or implied. While reading this essay may give you food for thought, actually printing and eating it may make you sick.
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