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Study
Shows Increase in Autism.
Autism is about 10 times as prevalent today as it was
in the 1980's, according to the country's largest study ever
on the problem. Some of the increase is the result of widened
definitions of the disorder, researchers say, but the explanation
for the rest of the increase is unknown.
The study, conducted in metropolitan Atlanta in 1996, found
that 3.4 in every 1,000 children ages 3 to 10 had mild to
severe autism that year. In the late 1980's, 4 to 5 in every
10,000 children were thought to be afflicted.
The higher rate, described in today's issue of the Journal
of the American Medical Association, is in line with rates
found in recent smaller studies in the United States and abroad
in which the autism prevalence was 4 to 6 children in 1,000.
The researchers, from the federal Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention, said the prevalence rates they found would
mean that at least 425,000 Americans under age 18 have some
form of autism.
Dr. Marshalyn Yeargin-Allsop, an epidemiologist at the National
Center on Birth
Defects and Developmental Disabilities, led the study.
Some of the increase can be explained by changes in the definition
of autism, a brain disorder in which normal social interaction
is difficult or impossible. The definition has widened to
include milder forms.
Many experts believe that autism results from an interplay
of genes and unknown environmental factors
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