COVID pandemic erased gains in early autism identification -US report
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[March 24, 2023]
By Julie Steenhuysen
CHICAGO (Reuters) - U.S. gains in the early identification of children
with autism, considered critical in enabling them to reach their full
potential, were largely wiped out by disruptions in evaluations in the
early months of the COVID-19 pandemic, U.S. health officials reported on
Thursday.
Such disruptions in connecting children to the services they need "could
have long-lasting effects,” Dr. Karen Remley, director of U.S. Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention's (CDC) National Center on Birth
Defects and Developmental Disabilities, said in a statement.
Autism spectrum disorder is a developmental disability marked by
impairments in social interaction and repetitive behaviors that can
impair a child's social interactions, communication and participation in
daily activities.
A pair of reports on the topic were published in the CDC's Mortality and
Morbidity Weekly Report. They were based on a review of clinical and
educational data in 11 racially and demographically mixed communities in
the United States.
In the report focused on early intervention, researchers compared the
rates of autism identification of 4-year-olds in 2020 to what
eight-year-olds had received four years earlier.
During the first three months of 2020, 4-year-olds were getting many
more evaluations and services for autism. When the pandemic hit in March
2020, "there was a very striking drop-off in those autism identification
services being received," study author Kelly Shaw of the CDC said in an
interview.
"It seems those improvements in early identification were ... kind of
wiped out by the pandemic," she said.
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The North Portico of the White House is
illuminated in blue for Autism Awareness Day, in Washington, U.S.
April 2, 2020. REUTERS/Tom Brenner/
Shaw said the hope is the report
will make communities aware of the losses, and work to identify and
provide services for those children.
In the second report focused on autism prevalence among 8-year-old
children, researchers found that for the first time, autism
prevalence among Asian, Black, and Hispanic children was higher than
among white children identified with autism.
Overall, the prevalence of U.S. 8-year-olds with autism rose to
1-in-36 children in 2020, or 2.8%, from 1-in-44, or 2.3%, in 2018.
Those increases largely reflected improvements in identifying
children with autism, study authors said.
CDC study author Matthew Maenner said the results reflect a closing
of gaps in efforts to identify children with autism across racial
and ethnic boundaries.
"Historically, there was more autism identified among white children
than among Black or Hispanic children," Maenner said.
Likewise, he said, there was also a dramatic difference between
children who lived in higher income areas compared with lower income
areas, where children in the wealthier areas had more diagnoses and
identification of autism.
"That is something we don't really see anymore," he said.
(Reporting by Julie Steenhuysen; Editing by Bill Berkrot)
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