Meet the Other Phone. Child-safe in minutes.

Meet the Other Phone.
Child-safe in minutes.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

Guest posts

See all MNHQ comments on this thread

Guest post: "We need to stop looking for a 'cause' for autism"

256 replies

MumsnetGuestPosts · 29/10/2015 15:11

When I tell parents that I've been writing about autism for 15 years, it doesn't take long to get to the questions. They lean in close and ask, "It's the vaccines, isn't it?" Or, "It's the pesticides, am I right?" Or, "I heard it's the GM foods?" It, that is, being the mysterious X factor responsible for the dramatic rise in autism diagnoses since the early 1990s.

Fundraising organisations in America routinely refer to this increase as an autism 'tsunami', or even an 'epidemic', as if your child could catch it in the playground. Meanwhile, health officials - wary of making blanket statements about hot-button issues before all the facts are in - cautiously attribute the rise to factors such as broadened diagnostic criteria and greater public awareness. But these bureaucratic phrases are cold comfort to a young mum wondering why her three-year-old insists on lining up his toys in strict queues.

As I peeled back layers of medical history to write NeuroTribes, I found a number of issues at play behind the increase in diagnoses. Among them was the story of a very determined young mother named Lorna Wing, who was a psychiatrist at University College London.

When Lorna's daughter, Susie, was diagnosed in the 1960s, autism was considered to be a very rare condition. There was no concept of a broad autism spectrum that includes both chatty Doctor Who fans and intellectually disabled adults who require assistance in daily living. Instead, autism was widely considered to be a rare form of infantile psychosis caused by 'refrigerator mothers' who were unable to offer their children adequate love and affection.

This tragically misguided theory had a catastrophic effect on families as children were sent away to custodial care facilities that were little more than warehouses for the 'severely subnormal', while many parents like Lorna and her husband John bore unspeakable burdens of guilt, shame, and grief.

When I interviewed Lorna, she told me that she thought the theory that autism was caused by neglectful parenting was "bloody stupid" from the start. She and John were both warm and affectionate people who doted on their daughter, but Susie didn't respond in the ways that a typically developing child would. She never directed her mother's gaze toward an object of mutual interest by pointing, for example. And when Susie had an imaginary tea party, she always sipped her imaginary tea alone.

Lorna wanted to spare other families the anguish of raising an autistic child in a world that offered few forms of support and resources for special education. In the 1970s, Lorna and her assistant Judy Gould undertook an ambitious survey for the Medical Research Council to locate all the children with cognitive disabilities whose families needed assistance in Camberwell, south London. The two researchers found many more children who exhibited the characteristic traits of autism than the prevailing theories would have predicted. They also found that the range of clinical presentations was much broader and more colourful than most clinicians believed. In other words, Judy told me, "these children didn't fit into nice, neat boxes."

Lorna and Judy lobbied their peers to replace the narrow conception of autism - which made it impossible for many of these children to get the help that a diagnosis would make available - with a much broader and more inclusive model that they named the autism spectrum. They also introduced a new diagnostic category, Asperger's syndrome, to make services available to highly verbal teenagers and adults. And the surge of new diagnoses began - just as Lorna and Judy predicted it would.

To them, this was good news; it meant help was more readily available to those who needed it. Unfortunately, people who were ignorant of their work were quick to attribute the rising numbers to the MMR vaccine, pesticides, mercury, wi-fi, and any number of other factors in the modern world.

Lorna knew, however, that people like her daughter have always been part of the human community - hidden behind other psychiatric labels, confined behind the walls of institutions, or struggling to get by with no diagnosis at all. This is not just a theory: in recent years, two major studies (one in the United Kingdom and one in Sweden) confirmed that the prevalence of autism hasn't gone up in recent years. The 'tsunami' of autism diagnoses is actually an epidemic of recognition. We now know that there are a large number of autistic people in our communities - needing help, education, housing, psychological services, reasonable accommodations in the workplace, and ways of making meaningful contributions with the special gifts of their atypical minds.

The problem with seeing people on the spectrum as a historical anomaly - as tragic victims of the toxic modern world - is that society will squander scarce and precious resources on hunting for causes and conspiracies, when what we should be doing is building more support systems for autistic people and their families. The fact that families in the UK still often have to wait years for a diagnosis indicates that the work of changing the world that Lorna and Judy embarked upon in Camberwell 40 years ago has barely begun.

Steve Silberman is the author of NeuroTribes: How to Think Smarter About People Who Think Differently.

OP posts:
Devilishpyjamas · 01/11/2015 10:32

Oh and the reason I say PM is just because I've had people on here before demanding the name of ds1's doctors so they can check that they said what I said they did. (Mad as a box of frogs clearly)

Sansoora · 01/11/2015 10:35

Devilish, you and my pal would get on well. She is very much into the gut aspect of things (what with her daughter being one of Andrew Wakefields original children).

PhilPhilConnors · 01/11/2015 10:59

Sunshine, I disagree that those conditions don't exist, I think they all describe sets of behaviours and they have to exist and be diagnosed in order for the children and adults affected to get some recognition and support for their difficulties.
I do agree that there are triggers, but the genetic makeup for those conditions have to be there in the first place.
Ds has HFA with PDA and SPD. He has no gut issues whatsoever. We've tried eliminating certain things (gluten, dairy, sugar) from his diet with no success, despite numerous spurious FB shares telling me that this would cure him. We've also tried various supplements and magnesium baths for months because FB told us they would also cure him, but nope, no difference at all.
What "cures" him is parenting him in a way that allows him complete control. Doing this makes all violence go away, all stims go away, no anxiety because we're not putting him in situations that he can't cope with. But it's impossible to maintain a life like that. We have other children, we sometimes have to go shopping, or go to the dr, or life chucks in illness or something else beyond our control, and parenting in that way sees an increase in criticism from others because we're not teaching him to cope in the future where he will have to do as he's told.

But please, please don't say these things don't exist, because it just adds ammunition to those we already have to fight to get any help whatsoever.

We're currently trying to get CAMHS involved, but they don't believe in PDA, and think it would help us to go on another useless parenting course which may be ASD specific, but as thumb has pointed out, ASD strategies don't work with a PDA child.

Saying that these conditions don't exist is like saying depression, anxiety, and other mental health problems don't exist, you just need a different mindset, or eat differently. Anorexia doesn't exist because all the patient needs to do is start eating - do you see what I mean?
I know that ASD isn't a MH issue, but I'm comparing because they are all conditions that you can't see, and they all come under fire from those who don't understand and are happy to tell us, the parents, or sufferers of MH issues that it's something we're doing, or not doing, that's causing our dc's problems.
Perhaps you could go so far as to say that type 2 diabetes (in many cases) doesn't exist because it's self inflicted and can be cured by eating low carb/high fat.
Asthma in certain cases can be cured by taking away all allergens and teaching the patient different breathing techniques, but in those cases you would never say asthma doesn't exist.

And to be fair, all the case I've read about where going gluten free has helped, it doesn't cure, it may alleviate some of the problems, but it doesn't cure.

And arguably, the children and adults who are incredibly successful are the ones who have been allowed to find their focus, immerse themselves in their interests, I'm thinking people like Temple Grandin, not gone down the gamut of curing them, but accepting who they are.
Although I'm aware this doesn't apply to severely impacted individuals.

PhilPhilConnors · 01/11/2015 11:00

Sorry that was very long Blush

Devilishpyjamas · 01/11/2015 11:27

Ds1 isn't really a Wakefield type child. His gut was damaged by overuse of antibiotics. His is more of a McFabe type issue I think (too many dodgy gut bacteria)

I think I see what sunshine is saying - that autism doesn't exist as a discrete 'thing'. It's lots of different things that lead to a particular presentation.

I think she's saying what I was about in the future msybe the underlying condition will be described for each individual (whether it's an specific problem in the immune system, or inheritance of particular traits, or mitochondrial dysfunction & a badly timed environmental insult) - with autism given as the presentation.

PhilPhilConnors · 01/11/2015 11:52

Yes I see what you mean.
Sorry sunshine, think I leapt in a bit defensively there!

sunshineandshowers · 01/11/2015 12:08

Sorry Phil. Of course they exist! I have explained myself badly. I am cooking lunch so am rushed. I mean the Nhs or the other people who I forget the name of have grouped together a set of symptoms and have and named it adhd. It is collectively all developmental delay. Itswim.

hairbrushbedhair · 01/11/2015 12:08

Has anyone read neutrigenomics (yasko)? Or have any thoughts on her theories?

sunshineandshowers · 01/11/2015 12:10

Also, it wasn't me with genetic frailty. And I have now decided I don't think it is positive. We don't say someone with blond hair has a genetic frailty and that's all blonde hair is. I'm going back to genetic predisposition.

Devilishpyjamas · 01/11/2015 12:10

Am interested in her theories. Am not conviced the available tests etc are up to much. But it's on my list to reread & think about again with ds1

I have a friend with CFS (a scientist friend) who swears by her approach (although doing it here with someone else).

sunshineandshowers · 01/11/2015 12:11

And yes Phil we all have to jump through the the hoops to get the support for our children. But on a bigger scale, lets cure this shit and find out what the hell is happening I think the labels just distract us.

Sansoora · 01/11/2015 12:13

Ds1 isn't really a Wakefield type child. His gut was damaged by overuse of antibiotics.

HI, I understood your child isnt a Wakefield child - it was the antibiotic damage you would have in common with my pal. She's very up on it all.

Devilishpyjamas · 01/11/2015 12:14

It was me with genetic fragility. I prefer it over predisposition for our family because I think predisposition sounds like there are only two outcomes (autism/non autism). In our case I think the options are fine vs whole host of different immune related conditions with autism being one possible outcome - all from the same fragility.

Might be wrong but that's how I've made sense of the family history with ds1 being the only autistic representative.

Devilishpyjamas · 01/11/2015 12:14

Oh that's interesting sansoora. If she posts online I might know her already.

Sansoora · 01/11/2015 12:16

Devilish - we are thinking alike! Smile

RealHuman · 01/11/2015 12:27

I'm not sure I want a cure for me for this "shit" sunshine - I'd like to be normal, but I'd like that to happen through the rest of the world accepting that I am a type of normal. And sure, I'd like to lose the sensory sensitivities and the anxiety. I'd especially like to never again experience how it feels to be locked in a body that won't move with a mouth that can't speak. But a cure? I wouldn't be me any more.

sunshineandshowers · 01/11/2015 13:04

Sorry I should not have sworn.

That's fine. You can choose that. But let's give other people the choice. If it is at all possible.

sunshineandshowers · 01/11/2015 13:05

Have never heard of neurtigenomics. Thanks.

RealHuman · 01/11/2015 13:12

That's why I said "for me", sunshine - I accept not everyone will have the same feelings as I do.

I worry that availability of a cure would put pressure on people like me who like the way we think to become more "normal" (like the pressure on Deaf people to have treatments, especially for their children) - IMO however it's extremely unlikely to happen, at least for those like me who already have those brain differences.

Devilishpyjamas · 01/11/2015 13:18

I agree with you there sunshine. I fully support anyone who doesn't want to be cured & wants acceptance. But my son's life is a living hell. I've seen him for ten minutes so far today & he's spent most of that whacking his head really hard. I've fed him strong drugs to try & stop that. His life wasn't always like this. Two years ago we'd have been surfing on a sunny Sunday (or a wet one come to that) - but instead the day will be spent trying to stop him knocking himself out. It's no life.

I don't think it has to be cure OR acceptance. But let's not think that 'accepting' the sort of autism ds1 is currently displaying will change his life for the better at all. It won't - only finding out what the fuck is wrong & dealing with it will change what he's living with.

sunshineandshowers · 01/11/2015 13:29

Devilish do you have any inkling of what happened 2 years ago? What's your instinct? Did he display any signs of autism before 2 years ago? It must be unbelievably tough for you.

RealHuman · 01/11/2015 13:30

I don't think it has to be cure OR acceptance.

Totally agree with this. If a cure or preventative treatment does become available, we should respect people's right to make decisions in their own or their children's best interests. But there are all kinds of important implications. For example, in my family, many people show some traits of ASD, so I suspect would show some similar genetic profiles, assuming there's a genetic component, and my sibling and I were both brought up by the same parents. My sibling was slightly late talking and certainly has traits but is very happy and successful with a life in hard science, intellectual hobbies, successful friendships and relationships, and excellent career prospects - many of these thanks to the traits of intense focus they have. It would be hard to see that the traits my sibling has should be cured,but probably impossible to tell either from genetics or early development which one of us would end up diagnosed with ASD and which one would benefit from those traits.

I also believe that acceptance of difference could not make things worse for your DS.

sunshineandshowers · 01/11/2015 13:31

Also, of course some of the best pieces of art,buildings, dishes, laws etc etc have come from people with autism. Our society is lacking in so many ways in accepting people that aren't "normal". Sorry for using that word.

Devilishpyjamas · 01/11/2015 13:34

He was severely autistic 2 years ago sunshine, just reasonably able to function with it. Then puberty hit big time & since the age of 15 & a half he's spiralled.

sunshineandshowers · 01/11/2015 13:36

I like your description about asthma Phil. If we got rid of all the things that caused it the Asthma would not exist and yes yes yes devilish autism is the presentation.