Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Conor Loves the Snow






I took these pictures of Conor enjoying the snow, literally rolling in the snow, five days ago and forgot about them until tonight. I walked to the Superstore with Conor along the Nashwaaksis trail and the rain picked up. Much of Sunday's snow is now gone. But not to worry, this being Canada Conor will have lots more snow to enjoy before too long. And he will enjoy it all like most Canadian children do.







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Tuesday, December 09, 2008

An Open Autism Letter To Bob Rae and Michael Ignatieff

Dear Mr. Rae and Mr. Ignatieff

I am the father of a 12 year old boy diagnosed with autistic disorder and assessed with profound developmental delays living in Fredericton, New Brunswick. I know you both are busy challenging for the leadership of the Liberal Party. I hope you both have time though to consider the importance of health and education issues to Canada's future and, if one of you becomes Liberal leader and Prime Minister, do not simply use the Constitution as a shield to avoid development of national policies in these two areas vital to the lives of Canadians as Stephen Harper has done.

In particular I ask that each of you, should you ultimately become Prime Minister, introduce a real National Autism Strategy for Canada. Not the existing "slap in the face" strategy of the Harper government but a real National Autism Strategy that helps all regions of the country deliver evidence based effective autism interventions during the pre-school and school years and permits adult autistic persons to live in decent residential accommodations and participate to the fullest extent of their abilities in Canadian society.

The beginning of such a strategy was outlined in Bill C-304, the private member's bill introduced by Charlottetown MP, and steadfast autism advocate, Shawn Murphy. That bill included amendment of the Canada Health Act to provide financing for autism treatment wherever autistic children reside in Canada:


BILL C-304

An Act to provide for the development of a
national strategy for the treatment of
autism and to amend the Canada Health
Act

Her Majesty, by and with the advice and
consent of the Senate and House of Commons
of Canada, enacts as follows:

SHORT TITLE

1. This Act may be cited as the National
Strategy for the Treatment of Autism Act.


NATIONAL CONFERENCE

2. The Minister of Health shall, before
December 31, 2006, convene a conference of
all provincial and territorial ministers responsible
for health for the purpose of working
together to develop a national strategy for the
treatment of autism. The Minister shall, before
December 31, 2007, table a report in both
Houses of Parliament specifying a plan of action
developed in collaboration with the provincial
and territorial ministers for the purpose of
implementing that strategy.

AMENDMENTS TO THE CANADA
HEALTH ACT

3. Section 2 of the Canada Health Act is
renumbered as subsection 2(1) and is
amended by adding the following:

(2) For the purposes of this Act, services
that are medically necessary or required under
this Act include Applied Behavioural Analysis
(ABA) and Intensive Behavioural Intervention
(IBI) for persons suffering from Autism Spectrum
Disorder.

Mr. Ignatieff, you voted in support of Bill C-304. I hope, should you accede to the Prime Minister's office that you will act on that expression of support for a badly needed national autism strategy.

Mr. Rae, you were not a sitting member of the Commons at that time but, having twice had the privilege of meeting you and discussing autism issues with you I know you have taken the time to inform yourself about, and shown interest in, the challenges facing autistic Canadians and their families. I hope that should you become Liberal leader and perhaps Prime Minister that you
would introduce as a government bill Shawn Murphy's private member's bill C-304.

I realize that you both have great issues on your minds. I hope you both have room in your hearts, and considerable intellects, for autistic Canadians.

Respectfully,


Harold L Doherty
Fredericton New Brunswick




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Monday, December 08, 2008

Autism Twitter Day Should Include Severe, Low Functioning, Autistic Disorder Realities

December 16, 2008 will be Autism Twitter Day, an excellent idea from Bonnie Sayers/autism family.

I hope though that Autism Twitter Day, in an effort to be positive, does not exclude the severely autistic - those persons with Autistic Disorder who are low functioning and cognitively impaired.


On Autism Twitter Day let us not forget those persons with Autistic Disorder who live their adult lives dependent on the care of others, some in full institutional care. Let us not forget those autistic persons who do not appear regularly in the mainstream media to espouse grand agendas. Let us not forget those persons with autistic disorder who bite or otherwise injure themselves or wander away from their homes, some found safely some not. Let us not forget those autistic persons whose families can no longer help them and care for them and are left with no choice but to give them up to the care of the state.

On Autism Twitter Day let us not forget those for whom the "autism" spectrum is named.

Let us include those with severe Autistic Disorder on Autism Twitter Day,




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Sunday, December 07, 2008

Autism’s False Proffit at Absolutely Unherdof

I strongly recommend that anyone interested in a rebuttal to Dr. Paul Offit's "False Prophets" and those who follow him in the autism blogosphere should check out "Autism's False Proffit" at Absolutely Unherdof.

The biggest issue AU has with Dr. Offit:

"is the lack of reference to real evidence but rather an attack on anyone that wants to try to help their autistic child try to recover from this neurological state."

Autism's False Proffit
is a well written, informative, pull no puches, commentary both about Offit's book and the ways in which parents seeking to help their autistic children are dismissed by the pretentious pseudo-scientists who populate certain blogs. A good read for anyone with an open mind on issues relating to causation of autism.




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Severe Autism: Mandy's Blog

I recommend that anyone interested in the realities facing severely autistic persons avoid mainstream media organizations and most internet blog sites. These sources,eg. CNN, CBC, The New Yorker, Autism Hub sites, tend to focus on the realities and agendas, of an alleged autism rights movement, consisting of a few high profile high functioning persons and persons with Aspergers. One internet exception worth visiting is a blog called Mandy's Blog at mencap.org.uk.

The alleged autistic rights movement actually suppresses the rights of the more severely autistic persons, badly in need of treatment, cure and assistance at all stages of life, by asserting that autism is simply a natural variation, that Neurotypicals should not seek to cure autistic persons, even their own autistic children, even when those children are actually much more severely autistic than the media posing "autistic rights" leaders.

The autism rights leaders like to publicly identify autism with very intelligent historical figures and frown upon the very mention of severely autistic persons; a reality they deny. Even discussion of autism, a spectrum of disorders, in terms of degrees of severity is attacked. After all it is difficult to claim the right to speak on behalf of a large group of people if in fact you faced very different challenges and they have never asked you to speak on their behalf. Better to pretend that the differences do not exist.

The introduction to Mandy's Blog makes it clear that this is not the usual joy of autism stuff where the mere mention of the severely autistic is frowned upon:

Charlotte is my daughter. She is 12 years old, blonde and pretty (although I am biased of course) and has severe autism.

When I read Mandy's description of her severely autistic 12 year old daughter I am struck by the similarities with my severely autistic 12 year old son, her echolalia, her bubbly personality, and her entertainement choices are all strikingly similar to my son Conor. Mandy speaks in a straight forward, realistic manner about the challenges facing her and her daughter.

I encourage everyone interested in learning about the challenges facing those with severe autism and their family members to visit Mandy's blog.




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Saturday, December 06, 2008

Conor, Mom and Dad Head to the Store








Conor, Mom and Dad head to the store for a few things, including a cupcake treat for Conor who shows patience waiting for Mom to check out of a busy Superstore. A few groceries can't stop Conor from flying home - in reverse.




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A Beautiful Fredericton December Morning















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Friday, December 05, 2008

UNC Expands Brain Imaging Study of Infants at Risk for Autism

News Release:

UNC expands brain imaging study of infants at risk for autism

CHAPEL HILL – Researchers at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill have been awarded an additional $3.25 million in funding to substantially expand an ongoing study that uses infant brain imaging to examine the brain and behavioral changes in very early life that may mark the onset of autistic symptoms.

“This is the first study that will prospectively measure, in the same group of infants, both the onset of autistic symptoms and brain enlargement that co-occurs at the end of the first year of life in children with autism,” said Joseph Piven, M.D., the study’s principal investigator and director of the Carolina Institute for Developmental Disabilities.

“Once these brain and behavioral changes are identified, potential benefits might include the development of early screening measures for autism and a better understanding of the underlying brain mechanisms, which we hope will lead to treatments to prevent or reduce the problems that individuals with autism face,” Piven said.

The Infant Brain Imaging Study at UNC was originally awarded $10 million in funding in 2007 by the National Institutes of Health as an Autism Center of Excellence under the project title "A Longitudinal MRI Study of Infants at Risk for Autism.” Recently the NIH awarded supplemental funding of $500,000 per year for five years and the Simons Foundation Autism Research Initiative provided $150,000 a year for five years.

For the study, UNC heads a network of four data collection sites across the country: at UNC, the University of Washington in Seattle, Washington University in St. Louis and the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. There is also a data coordinating center for the network at the Montreal Neurological Institute.

The overarching aim of the study is to examine the brain and behavioral changes in very early life that may mark the onset of autistic symptoms. It will enroll 544 infant siblings of older autistic children, at 6 and 12 months of age, and follow them forward with behavioral assessments and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) exams at 12 and 24 months of age.

The additional funding will allow researchers to examine all 544 children going forward at all time points instead of focusing only on those that are most likely to develop autism. Also, the additional funding is from a public-private partnership between the NIH and an outside funding agency, and this is a somewhat novel arrangement, Piven said.

The study builds on two key research findings from the researchers involved in the IBIS Network. The first finding, from UNC researchers, is that children with autism have larger brains, from five to 10 percent larger at two years of age than children without autism, and this enlargement or overgrowth of the brain starts around the end of a child’s first year of life.

The second finding, from behavioral researchers led by Lonnie Zwaigenbaum, M.D., from University of Alberta in Edmonton, is that the onset of the social deficits associated with autism does not occur until the end of the first year.






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Some Real Autism Hubs

One of the great misnomers of the autism blogosphere is the site called "Autism Hub". The AH is anything but a hub for autism blogging. Fortunately the past year has seen the development of some true autism hubs in the blogosphere.

While pretending to be a center for "the very best in Autism Blogging" the Autism Hub is really a gathering place and blog feed service for a narrower slice of autism reality, the anti-autism cure adherents of "Neurodiversity" which claims that autism disorders are not disorders at all, just natural variations of human existence. There are two primary categories of autism bloggers at the AH - High functioning autistics and persons with Aspergers and a few parents who subscribe to Neurodiversity ideology.

Lower functioning autistic persons with cognitive disabilities are rarely mentioned at the "Autism" Hub. They are outcasts at the AH where any mention of the harsher realities facing the more severely autistic is strictly verboten. Mention of possible environmental causes of autism is also frowned upon by the Neurodiversity leaders of the AH who have gone so far as to insinuate that free discussion of environmental causes of autism and of the harsher realities facing lower functioning autistic persons have contributed to horrific tragedies of parents who have murdered their autistic children.

The past year though has seen the development of some true autism hubs in the blogsophere, sites that aggregate or post blogs reflecting the entire spectrum of autism perspectives. On these sites even autism reality oriented blogs surface. One site in particular which fills the need for a real autism hub in the blogosphere is The Autism Retort which states that it includes Autism blogs of all flavors. Those you agree with, those you don't.

The Autism Retort lives up to the claim by including reality oriented blogs like Facing Autism in New Brunswick alongside ideological blogs like Autism Vox and the Autism Hub itself. Even John Best's Hating Autism (condemned by Autism Hub Bloggers) is listed (although misnamed as Halting Autism). BlogNetNews.com/Autism also presents a wide range of autism blogs. A recent start up is Top Autism Sites which includes both reality based Autism blogs and ideologically oriented neurodiversity blogs .

In all fairness to the Autism Hub although it does not represent the spectrum of autism perspectives in the blogosphere it is a convenient place to check out Neurodiversity Blogs. I drop into the AH periodically and I sincerely thank the organizers for providing this service.





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Thursday, December 04, 2008

Harold Doherty's Autism Advocacy Awards


#1 Autism Advocacy Award - Conor's Smile, Joy and Happiness






















#2 Autism Advocacy Award - An ASNB Mug

Given To Me By Fellow Parents, Friends and Officers of the Autism Society of New Brunswick. The Mug was given to me a couple of years back and, like me, shows the wear and tear of time. The Hulk was a nickname given by former ASNB President Lila Barry, who has been a force for autism in New Brunswick. The picture is my "mug" superimposed on a target background.






#3 Loyal Order of the Flying Swine Award

I was one of the recipients of the Flying Swine Award handed out by Jean Lewis and David Marley. This award has been handed to few people but includes some very distinguished autism advocates including Jim Munson, Shawn Murphy, Andy Scott and peter Stoffer.

With these three awards I have been truly honored and will continue my autism advocacy efforts.




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Wednesday, December 03, 2008

Autism and Stem Cell Tourists

In "Stem Cell Tourists" Go Abroad for Unproven Treatments National Geographic News reports on the growing numbers of Americans traveling abroad to seek stem cell treatment for a variety of conditions including Parkinson's, Diabetes, heart disease and emphysema. The NG article reports expert concerns about stem cell treatment being oversold as proven therapy rather than experimental, the risk of harmful complications and great expense for the patients. Although autism is not mentioned in the NG article Autism Spectrum Disorders are amongst conditions for which stem cell treatments are offered outside the United States and Canada.




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Monday, December 01, 2008

Slower to React: Comprehension and Slower Brain Reaction To Sounds In Autistic Children

A study conducted by Timothy Roberts and the Department of Radiology at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, using a technique known as MEG, or magnetoencephalography, has found that the brains of autistic children react a fraction of a second slower to sounds that the brains of non-autistic children. This finding may explain communication and comprehension problems associated with autism. It also appears to confirm the theory that autism arises from under connectivity in the brain.

Roberts' team monitored tiny magnetic fields produced by electrical impulses in the brain' of autistic and non-autistic children while listening to a battery of sounds and syllables. The brains of the autistic children were found to react between 20 and 50 percent slower to sounds than the brains of the non-autistic children.

Roberts indicated that the findings suggest a means of stratifying or classifying autism patients by severity and help sort out the genetic and environmental causes of autism:

In comparison to the tenth of a second response time in the brains of normal children in the study, the autistic children's brains were anywhere from 20 percent to 50 percent slower to react.

Since a single syllable in a multisyllable word might take less than one-quarter of a second to say, Roberts said 1/20th of a second extra delay in the response time of the brains of autistic children may hamper their ability to comprehend.

"There could be abnormal routing or a lack of connectivity in the brain," he said in a telephone interview. "It may be like a highway with traffic making it hard to get through."

"We think this (delay) is a signature or a biomarker that could be used to stratify autism patients," since autism is a spectrum of disorders that afflicts people to vastly different degrees, he said.

....

He said it may also provide researchers with more clues to the causes of autism and help solve the dilemma of what is hereditary and what is environmental about the condition.

As a matter of my personal belief, this study seems to make sense of some of my verbal interaction with my son Conor, who is diagnosed with Autistic Disorder, and assessed with profound developmental delays. His slow response to speech is noticeable even without the sophisticated monitoring and measuring employed in this study. It might also explain why he seems to lack comprehension of speech but can figure out how to manipulate a computer and find what he wants eg. Pinky Dinky Doo, O Canada YouTube videos, with little difficulty.

This study seems to me to represent a significant advance in our understanding of what are now called the Autism Spectrum disorders and another significant development in the Autism Knowledge Revolution.




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Facing Autism Eliminated From Best Canadian Health Blog Award Voting

Facing Autism in New Brunswick did not make it to the second and final round of voting in the Best Health Blog Award for the Canadian Blog Awards 2008. It was an honor to be nominated. The health blogs in the final round are:







It is interesting to note that 2 of the final candidates for Best Canadan Health Blog Award deal primarily with weight and obesity issues. Obesity is certainly becoming a major health issue in Canada and the United States.

On a personal note I have lost 35 pounds on my current diet.




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