Showing posts with label spectrum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label spectrum. Show all posts

Friday 4 March 2016

Autism And Suicide

Autism And Suicide.
Children with autism may have a higher-than-average hazard of contemplating or attempting suicide, a recent study suggests. Researchers found that mothers of children with autism were much more likely than other moms to approximately their child had talked about or attempted suicide: 14 percent did, versus 0,5 percent of mothers whose kids didn't have the disorder. The behavior was more plain in older kids (aged 10 and up) and those whose mothers touch they were depressed, as well as kids whose moms said they were teased. An autism maven not involved in the research, however, said the study had limitations, and that the findings "should be interpreted cautiously".

One mind is that the information was based on mothers' reports, and that's a limitation in any study, said Cynthia Johnson, captain of the Autism Center at Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh. Johnson also said mothers were asked about suicidal and "self-harming" bunk or behavior. "A lot of children with autism hokum about or engage in self-harming behavior. That doesn't mean there's a suicidal intent".

Still, Johnson said it makes have a hunch that children with autism would have a higher-than-normal risk of suicidal tendencies. It's known that they have increased rates of decline and anxiety symptoms, for example. The dissemination of suicidal behavior in these kids "is an important one and it deserves further study".

Autism spectrum disorders are a place of developmental brain disorders that hinder a child's ability to communicate and interact socially. They rank from severe cases of "classic" autism to the relatively mild form called Asperger's syndrome. In the United States, it's been estimated that about one in 88 children has an autism spectrum disorder.

This week, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention revised that primacy to as intoxication as one in 50 children. The inexperienced findings, reported in the journal Research in Autism Spectrum Disorders, are based on surveys of nearly 800 mothers of children with an autism spectrum disorder, 35 whose kids were untie of autism but suffered from depression, and nearly 200 whose kids had neither disorder.

The children ranged in life-span from 1 to 16, and the autism spectrum kurfuffle cases ranged in severity. Non-autistic children with despondency had the highest rate of suicidal talk and behavior, according to mothers - 43 percent said it was a question at least "sometimes".