Rethinking Autism: Variation And Complexity

Thảo luận trong 'Học tập' bởi ebfree, 24/5/2024.

  1. ebfree

    ebfree Thành viên kỳ cựu

    Tham gia:
    20/5/2024
    Bài viết:
    6,003
    Đã được thích:
    0
    Điểm thành tích:
    86
    Click Here to Download: https://ouo.io/0S5D8v
    [​IMG]
    Rethinking Autism: Variation and Complexity
    By: Waterhouse, Lynn
    Publisher:
    Academic Press
    Print ISBN: 9780124159617, 0124159613
    eText ISBN: 9780124159617, 9780123914132, 0123914132
    Pages: 480
    Format: PDF
    Available from $ 74.95 USD
    SKU 9780124159617
    The media, scientific researchers, and the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual all refer to autism as if it were a single disorder or a single disorder over a spectrum. However, autism is unlike any single disorder in a variety of ways. No single brain deficit is found to cause it, no single drug is found to affect it, and no single cause or cure has been found despite tremendous research efforts to find same. Rethinking Autism reviews the scientific research on causes, symptomology, course, and treatment done to date…and draws the potentially shocking conclusion that autism does not exist as a single disorder. The conglomeration of symptoms exists, but like fever, those symptoms aren’t a disease in themselves, but rather a result of some other cause(s). Only by ceasing to think of autism as a single disorder can we ever advance research to more accurately parse why these symptoms occur and what the different and varied causes may be.


    Autism is a massive worldwide problem with increasing prevalence rates, now thought to be as high as 1 in 38 children (Korea) and 1 in 100 children (CDC- US)
    Autism is the 3rd most common developmental disability; 400,000 people in the United States alone have autism
    Autism affects the entire brain, including communication, social behavior, and reasoning and is lifelong
    There is no known cause and no cure
    Funding for autism research quadrupled from 1995 to 2000 up to $45 million, and the Interagency Autism Coordinating Committee has recommended $1 billion funding from 2010-2015
     

    Xem thêm các chủ đề tạo bởi ebfree
    Đang tải...


Chia sẻ trang này