UA-45667900-1

Tuesday 28 March 2023

Are any autism statistics credible? Most are not.


The best place for many statistics

In 2021 the UK government carried out a census and in that census there were some voluntary questions about sexual orientation. A surprisingly large 92.5% of respondents, aged 16 or over, answered the question on sexual orientation and just 3.2% identified as gay, lesbian, bisexual, or another sexual orientation (LGBT+). 

Even in the gay capital of the UK, a city called Brighton, only 14% identified as L or G. 

2021 census: What do we know about the LGBT+ population?

Go back 40 years and many LGBT people would have undoubtedly lied about their orientation, or just refused to answer the question. In most Western countries this is no longer the case – the pendulum has swung very much in favour of all minorities.

When my elder son was applying for jobs, the first part was always online and one of the first questions he faced is what is your sexual orientation – that is meant to be a sign of progress, apparently.  Having started work he discovered that the real key factor of the selection was, not surprisingly, whether you will fit in and what you like to drink down at the pub. I guess they want meat-eating colleagues who like a drink, or two.  Not a place for teetotal vegetarians.

If you watch CNN, the BBC or read news from a liberal source you might think that 20% were LGBT.  I would have guessed 10%.  In research targeting young people you also get vastly inflated figures, because their views are shaped by social media which rarely reflects reality.

 

Back to Autism

In the current diagnostic framework autism is split into level 1 (least affected), level 2 (moderate) and level 3 (most affected).

In some countries only a small number of very specific people can make a diagnosis, whereas in others a much broader group can hand out a diagnosis. In some countries you can effectively buy the diagnosis you are seeking.

In some countries only kids with an autism diagnosis can get free early intervention. Some doctors are diagnosing autism in a toddler with an intellectual/development delay because they know he is likely to benefit, even though he does not technically qualify.

In Australia having a level 1 diagnosis does not automatically entitle you to any free services and it was recently reported that doctors are changing the diagnosis to increase the child’s entitlements. 


Children are being diagnosed with autism more severely to secure NDIS funding


When I visited our local special school many years ago to meet their piano teacher, I learned that the school had a large Roma population and so some autism parents did not want to send their children there.  I asked why there were so many Roma kids. I was told they do not have autism, they are classified as having MR/ID, which then entitles the parents to financial support.

Many readers of this blog told me that if they improve their child’s cognition they will lose supports, so they keep on using an old IQ test result.  

 

So do I believe this recently published chart from the US?

 



It tells us that in 4 just years the number of kids with autism and MR/ID has doubled to  more than 1%.

It is not credible.

Here is the source:

 

AUTISM AND DEVELOPMENTAL DISABILITIES MONITORING (ADDM) NETWORK


 

Here is a chart showing autism prevalence in specific states in the US in 2020.



California leads the pack.

 

“Only” 22% of kids with ASD in California also had intellectual disability (MR/ID) compared to 48% in Arkansas.

But, that is because kids are twice as likely to get an autism diagnosis if they live in California.  This is because they are diagnosing many minor cases that would not get diagnosed in Arkansas.

 

California:



 

Arkansas:

 


Current incidence of autism

If 4.5% of 8 year old Californians have autism, that likely equates to something like 7% of boys and 2% of girls.

We know that about 20% of school children have some special educational need.  We know that about 4% of Americans will develop bipolar disorder, about 0.5% will develop schizophrenia and approximately 9% of adults in the U.S. have some type of personality disorder.

Let’s assume 10% of Americans are LGBT, well maybe better say Californians, to keep the peace.

We know that many LGBT people experience bullying and exclusion which will give some people symptoms that do indeed overlap with those of mild autism and hence they may choose to identify as autistic, get a diagnosis, join the autism club and make TikTok videos.

 

Future incidence of “autism”

I would predict the published incidence of “autism” in 8 year old Californian boys will reach 20% in the next decade.

Am I worried? Not really. It’s nonsense.

Any increase in genuine, severe, non or limited-verbal autism, with IQ<70 is a problem.  It could and should be addressed, but it will not be.

By the way, this kind of autism does not need the new name “Profound Autism”, that has been proposed by the Lancet Commission.  It already has several names, including Classic Autism and Autistic Disorder.  It just needs medical treatment! Go from level 3 to level 2, maybe passing some Australians going the other direction, seeking more money from NDIS.

  

Statistics in Autism Clinical Trials

All clinical trials involve statisticians, lots of data and hence lots of charts.

Unfortunately, almost all autism clinical trials are flawed from the outset.  There is no singular autism, but rather hundreds of biological variations that produce symptoms that appear to overlap with this fuzzy autism spectrum.  

Lump in all these different types of autism and of very different levels of severity and give all the kids the same therapy.

When a subgroup does respond, ignore it because it is too small; the overall clinical response does not satisfy the goal/endpoint of the trial.  The trial is branded a failure.

In the bumetanide trial as an example, what percentage of parents actually gave the pill every morning to the kids for the duration of the trial?  If the trial was during the school term, there will have been problems with needing to pee on the way to school and for the first 2 hours at school. After complaints from school and accidents in the car, what percentage really gave the pill every day?

As some readers of this blog have proposed, “I’ll just give it at the weekend”.

Combine the behavior of the parents, the school bus driver and the class teacher with the trial using a dose 50% too low, is it a surprise the statistics show that the phase 3 trial failed? Not to me and many others.


Statistics on Treatable ID and single gene autisms

We are told that syndromes leading to treatable types of intellectual disability (MR/ID) are so rare that it is not cost effective to screen children for them.

We are also told that there are numerous single gene autisms, but that they are ultra rare.

Since almost no children with autism are routinely screened using genetic testing, there is no way to know just how rare treatable ID or single gene autism actually are. 

The current statistics on the incidence rates are nonsense.


Conclusion

Garbage in, garbage out.

Since it was first coined in the world of computer science in the 1950s, the phrase “garbage in, garbage out” has been a popular metaphor for flawed, or nonsense data input that produces flawed or nonsense output, aka “garbage.”

Mark Twain popularised the phrase "lies, damned lies, and statistics" to describe the persuasive power of statistics to bolster weak arguments.

Or, as I would say, if you need a statistician to prove your point, you probably don’t have one.





11 comments:

  1. Hey Peter, I spoke to several Californian organisations and they told me that the numbers correlate across severity degrees. So the increase is seen in every category of severity (not absolutely but about) equally.
    They have some data to support this, if you are interested.
    I also have access to data from our own region and some other ones around the world.
    We are, truly, talking about an increase in severe autism. And it is dramatic.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I have no doubt that there is a genuine continual increase in severe autism. That is exactly what you would expect from all the science in this blog. There is a lack of quality data to prove it.

      Now that you have surgeons, commercial airline pilots, billionaires, celebrities and even school bus drivers diagnosed with autism, it is not seen as any kind of public health emergency.

      The data is all mixed up, like comparing apples with oranges. The diagnostic framework keeps changing and society has gone from hiding disability to applauding it, at least the modern type of “able disabled”.

      Many people nowadays exaggerate their level of disability.

      Anyone who looked into the data will soon see how shabby and unreliable it is. Is this on purpose?

      How many 100% mute 8 years olds with autism are there in California? Is this figure increasing?

      The term non-verbal used to mean mute, but now many parents apply it to a child who is not engaging in free-flowing two-way conversation. Non-verbal became “not chatty”.

      You now have people in special schools who are entirely conversational, have at least average IQ, but have an autism diagnosis. They will appear in the figures as disabled and receiving expensive services.

      The losers are the kids and adults with non-verbal level 3 autism with IQ often less than 50. That is why I have this blog.

      Delete
    2. From my experience in Hong Kong, it is a mixed bag still. There is a rising awareness of the importance of “early intervention”, that educated parents would be able to identify mild cases very early on, while psychologists (private) would not hesitate to rate them as level 2/3 in order to be cautious under the principles of “treating all ASD cases as severe cases”. With the diagnosis you would receive more intensive support when the kid was still young. That in fact is NOT a bad thing as the kids will then receive a better chance to turn around when the brain is still plastic. BUT, and a big BUT, there are still many parents who reject to accept ASD diagnosis and let the kids outgrow it. I then saw these kids struggle in primary schools, or had they been “over-diagnosed” back then and receive the intervention, their lives could have been very different. So, as I said in the beginning, yes and no, as an “over-diagnosis” actually causes some parents to depart from the facts even more. We also need to save those kids.

      Delete
  2. it sad, at my poor country, no free anything, me and my wife can get money so can paid for my kid learn at special central, but is not enough, my kid have low IQ, learn ABA not enough. i can not test about gen, it not exist at my country, so my core question is how to raise IQ ?. i used bumex, leucovorin and roflumilast, can you recommend all maybe

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. If you do not know the cause of low IQ, then all you can do is try therapies and see if any help.
      Even if you do know the cause, in most countries nothing would be done.
      You could contact the US company GeneDX who do genetic testing and offer lower prices to needy people. Tell them you are in Vietnam and ask for a special discount. You send them a sample and they screen for genetic causes of autism or low IQ.
      There is guarantee they will find something useful, but at least you have tried.

      Delete
  3. Peter,

    Some part of California's numbers may be explained by tech immigrants from third world countries, whose progeny tend to have a higher risk of autism as we have seen in one of your previous posts. But most of it is likely over diagnosis.

    In 2021, while we were waiting that a formal appointment with a psychologist in Ohio, I spoke to a speech pathologist who had recently immigrated from India and worked for a high school in California. She told me that she had met many high performing kids who she later found out were autistic. She said would have never guessed that if she hadn't looked at their files. In the show 'Curb your Enthusiasm' based in LA, so many people including Larry using 'being on the spectrum' as a throwaway excuse for rude behaviour or to even curry favours. I guess its now become more of a cool/badass trait than a disability.

    On the other hand, in India, where I currently live, there is a huge reluctance to use the A-word, even in the case of severely affected kids. Initially I was a little surprised, but now I understand. It is like disclosing a skin disease with no known cure, so why get a life-long label and invite social stigma?

    In all this, the most puzzling case for me has been the case of the IIT alumni. These are some of the smartest people in the world, working in Silicon valley with many of their kids having autism, but most of them who I have spoken to, seem to have just accepted it and moved on. Of all the people in the world, I would have expected these guys to obsess over the causes and crack the puzzle, but alas, they seem to have bought into the mainstream arguments and made peace with it. It saddens me. One exception though is the billionaire Sridhar Vembu whose ex-wife runs the Brain Foundation which funds a lot of good research.

    Regards,
    Anvesh

    ReplyDelete
  4. For a long time I was bought into the idea that Autism has skyrocketed and 1 in 40 to 50 ish kids today are autistic. Observing all that is going on in the Autism world, my perception has changed. I definitely think it is over diagnosis. I personally know 3 kids who had delays. Two of their parents refused to even accept it as anything odd and their belief was rewarded. The kids naturally grew out of it. The other kid has also naturally grew out of it with ABA/speech only being the intervention. I even wondered if my child would ever be able to do that without any interventions.

    For that matter I even suspected if my older daughter was autistic when she was 2 years old. She hit all milestones ahead and she even spoke ahead of her peers. But she had severe social issues. When she was 3 years old she also showed mild echolalia. So I always thought she had Autism and probably it is a cool factor because she also got a rare gift called Perfect Pitch. Only after my son was born and got Autism, I know this a different beast. She was nothing like my son in terms of the disabilities and development.

    One thing what I notice is that most kids these days are at least mildly affected neurodevelopmentally. They are not hitting the milestones as quick as once kids in general used to do or they have social issues. Probably that's inevitable with so much environmental toxins around which again can be correlated with the life style and consumption changes. Looks like there is some agenda to fit a lot of them into a bucket in the name of neurodiversity so the issue about a global change in neuro-development gets totally diverted

    ReplyDelete
  5. Hi Peter,

    Follow me down a rabbit hole if you have a second. Ok, so Bumetanide is a diuretic. It can cause hypokalemia. Prolonged hypokalemia can cause autophagy.

    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6395725/

    Because of the hypokalemia the body can produce more vasopressin.

    The release of endogenous vasopressin is known to be primarily triggered by hypovolemia (via cardiopulmonary and arterial baroreceptors) and increased extracellular osmolarity. However, the increase in endogenous vasopressin associated with maintenance of normokalemia in our survivor group suggests that serum potassium may be a specific trigger and target for vasopressin release.

    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6678231/

    https://journals.physiology.org/doi/full/10.1152/ajpregu.00206.2013

    This is probably why it takes 2-3 weeks for bumetanide to work.

    -Stephen

    ReplyDelete
  6. or maybe its the hyponatremia that causes an increase of vasopressin

    https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/3966753/

    ReplyDelete
  7. Another mechanism of action can be via vasopressin and oxytocin. The presence of oxytocin in the CSF seems to originate from neuronal oxytocinergic extensions to the limbic system, brain stem, and spinal cord. Oxytocin receptors are distributed in different parts of the central nervous system, such as the basal ganglia, limbic system, thalamus and hypothalamus, and brain stem. Oxytocin modulates social behavior, motor function, pain control, memory and learning, eating behavior, stress and anxiety, and emotional processing. Oxytocin administration reduces stress and anxiety and depression in animal models. This effect seems to be modulated at least partly by the effects of oxytocin on the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis and the opioidergic and dopaminergic systems in limbic brain structures. Several animal model studies support the role of oxytocin in improving social behavior, an effect that appears to involve the melatoninergic and endocannabinoid systems, specifically an increase in social interactions produced by agonism at the melanocortin four receptor (MC4R (Russo et al. 2005; Dos Santos et al. 2019). CBD leads to enhancement in the release of vasopressin and oxytocin; thus, it could positively affect ASD core symptoms. Studies have shown that oxytocin administration to patients with ASD improves social interactions, reduces classic repetitive behavior, and increases eye contact (Weia et al. 2015). Another mechanism of action of CBD is to act as a dopamine receptor antagonist, which can facilitate its use as an antipsychotic (Dos Santos et al. 2019; Weia et al. 2015).

    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8675523/#CR25

    ReplyDelete
  8. Futhermore, high dose Sporanox causes hypokalemia

    https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/1648887/

    https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29385285/


    ReplyDelete

Post a comment