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Showing posts with label 1 in 88 Children diagnosed with Autism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1 in 88 Children diagnosed with Autism. Show all posts

October 15, 2012

Over half of children with autism bullied

>> View CBS42 video

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (WIAT)- Two-thirds of children with Autism Spectrum Disorders are or have been bullied.  That's the findings of a recent Interactive Autism Network study.  Children with varying forms of Autism were three times more likely to have been bullied in the past month.  One reason, is that children with Autism share the inability to read social situations, cues, or the facial exressions of other children.  "With any kid, if you're different you're going to get picked on.  That's just a given, but with kids with Autism Spectrum Disorder are different in a way they can't control.  They have no idea that they're different.  They see themselves as any other typical kid," says Anjanette Robinson, an Out-Patient Therapist at the Glenwood Autism & Behavioral Health Center.

Autism now affects 1 in every 88 newborns. To see the extended interview with Anjanette Robinson, please click on the video below.


August 11, 2012

Autistic singing sensation makes live debut

An autistic singing sensation from Gwithian made his live debut at Holifield Festival

GWYTHIAN, Cornwall, UK: Kyle Coleman, 25, released his first album earlier this year after spending most of his life unable to say more than a few words. Kyle was found to have perfect pitch and a lovely singing voice after attending music therapy lessons.

Kyle performed at the Holifield Festival – which raises funds for a day care centre for people with special needs – in Gweek on August 4.

Kyle Coleman and Friends formed especially to perform as a one off at the festival and the band included Eddie Callis, who is also a talented musician with autism. The rest of the band was formed by Eddie's uncle Joe Callis, a former member of the Eighties' band Human League, Eddie's mum Jacqui, her partner Tony and their friend Wendy, who played mandolin and violin.

Kyle's mum Caroline said the performance showed that people with autism could go beyond the limitations of the disability.

She said: "They played some new stuff and some old stuff from Kyle's album and it went really well. It was a festival where people knew that it was to support people with disabilities. They were really open and people were moved by what they achieved."

Kyle became the first non-verbal autistic person to release an album in April this year when his album, Therefore I Am, hit the shelves to coincide with World Autism Awareness Day (April 2). It has sold copies worldwide, in addition to receiving local and global media coverage and radio play.

Since then, Kyle has been offered a record deal by a US company specialising in autistic artists, which they are still considering.

Music has already opened a lot of doors for Kyle. He is now a member of Apex in Redruth, an arts participation and expression group for adults with learning disabilities and autism.

Caroline said Kyle and Eddie were now aiming to move from Kyle and Friends to form their own band called Aut -2.

She said: "This renaming of the band was a direct result of the special friendship that Kyle and Eddie have, and their combined love and passion for music and song. Our vision is to create a musical duo where these two talented autistic individuals, supported by a circle of trust from family members and friends, can show that people with autism have a valued place in the music industry and that autism is merely a label."

Kyle has also released a music video for his debut single, Just Listen. This can be viewed at: www.kylecoleman.co.uk

(Source: ThisisCornwall.co.uk, August 9, 2012)

July 26, 2012

Author, Mother Crafts a Tale of Parenting and Autism

PRWEB.COM NewswireWiesbaden (PRWEB) July 25, 2012
According to the Centers for Disease Control, autism has become an epidemic developmental disability impacting 1 in 88 children. It is to the parents of these 1 in 88 children that author and mother Victoria Baczewski offers her new book “Niki: Now I Know It” (published by WestBow Press).

“Niki” is the story of one mother’s journey raising a child with autism. It chronicles both the growth and development of the child along with the corresponding spiritual growth and development of the mother. In addition, it contrasts worldly values versus Godly values to conclude with the premise that lives are not so much about what is produced but about the fruits of the Holy Spirit that are manifested.

An excerpt from “Niki”:
“When a woman learns she is with child, a thousand different thoughts and emotions assail her. Will the baby be a boy or a girl? Who will he or she look like? Will he or she be healthy? Then we pray. Dear Lord, please make my baby healthy, keep me strong, and let the delivery be smooth and free of complications. Again we dream: Will this child be athletic, musical, intelligent, or sociable? Unless she has had some prior experience with disability, rarely does a woman think, What if my child has special needs?
Yet according to Campaign for Children’s Health Care, 18.5 percent of our children are born with or develop some form of special needs. This means that 18.5 percent of parents each year will be tasked with the challenge of raising those children born with special needs, be they emotional, physical, or intellectual. It is a unique, often confusing, and often frightening journey. It is a journey I began in 1989 with the birth of my second son.”

“There are many books regarding autism,” Baczewski says, “but they primarily address children who cease having autism; these children become indistinguishable from their typically developing peers. I have not found any that speak to the value of a child who remains autistic, which accounts for 80 to 90 percent of our individuals with autism.”


Read the full story at http://www.prweb.com/releases/2012/7/prweb9728601.htm
Source: Digital Journal

About the Author Victoria Baczewski is a wife and mother of two boys. She served in the U.S. Air Force. With her marriage to a military man, she has moved frequently and has lived in the United States, Germany and Romania. She has also traveled extensively to various other areas throughout Europe. She has served in various chapels, as well as in various ministries. She is the mother of a child with autism and has worked extensively with as well as homeschooled him over the past 23 years. Since then, she graduated from George Mason University with a Master of Education in special education. Despite the challenges of being a military wife and mother of a child with special needs, Baczewski finds joy and hope through her faith in God. She prays that in the pages of this book others may also find faith, hope and joy.

WestBow Press http://www.westbowpress.com or call (866)-928-1240. Follow us @westbowpress on Twitter for the latest news.



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July 18, 2012

Diagnosing Autism In Babies: New Survey Could Identify Disorder In First Year Of Life

A questionnaire could help identify children at risk for autism in their first year of life, new research shows, and that could affect how early children start intervention programs as well as those programs' effectiveness.

"Identification of children at risk for [autism spectrum disorder] at 12 months could provide a substantial number of children and their families with access to intervention services months or years before they would otherwise receive a traditional diagnosis," study co-author Lauren Turner-Brown, a researcher with the Program for Early Autism, Research, Leadership and Service at the University of North Carolina School of Medicine said in a statement.

Nearly 700 parents completed the "First Year Inventory" questionnaire, designed by University of North Carolina researchers. The survey asks roughly 60 questions about things like reactivity, repetitive behavior and expressive communication -- all of which can provide hints about whether or not a child is autistic.

The parents also filled out screening questionnaires when their children turned 3.

More than 30 percent of the children believed to be at-risk for an autism spectrum disorder based on answers provided at age 1, were diagnosed with the disorder by age 3. Eighty-five percent of the children who were at-risk based on answers when they were 1, had other developmental challenges that called for evaluation or intervention by age 3.

Overall, the researchers called those results "encouraging"... READ MORE >> 

July 8, 2012

SHARE if you ❤ someone on the Spectrum!


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1 IN 88 CHILDREN ARE DIAGNOSED WITH AUTISM  •  HELP SPREAD THE WORD
SHARE if you  someone on the Spectrum!

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