Daily Bulletin

Men's Weekly

.

Fishing for favors: how inmates lure prison staffers

  • Written by The Conversation
imageJoyce Mitchell appears in court in Plattsburgh, New York on July 28 2015.Reuters

New York Clinton Correctional Facility employee Joyce Mitchell – who engaged in a sexual relationship with an inmate and helped him and a second prisoner stage a dramatic escape – ended up pleading guilty earlier this week.

Before this gripping story made...

Read more

Are we ready for a test that could 'pre-diagnose' autism in babies?

  • Written by The Conversation

image

What are you looking at?

For children with autism, early intervention is critical. Therapies and education – especially in the first two years of life – can facilitate a child’s social development, reduce familial stress and ultimately improve quality of life.

But while we can reliably diagnose autism spectrum disorder (ASD) at 24 months, most children are diagnosed much later. This is largely due to a lack of resources, poor adherence to screening guidelines and the fact that primary care physicians are often uncomfortable talking about autism risk to parents.

But what if we could use a simple, routine test to screen every baby for autism? It’s not as far-fetched as it sounds. Larger-scale clinical trials for an eye-tracking device that could be used to predict autism are slated to begin this year.

This presents a new and unique set of ethical concerns. Technologies that predict the possibility of a neurological disorder have the weight of affecting conceptions of not just “what” these children have but “who” these children will become.

As a neuroethicist and autism researcher, we believe it is time to have a conversation about these technologies, and what it will mean for parents and children or for people with autism.

Find out more  https://www.autismparentingmagazine.com/autism-stimming-causes-management-and-types/

Why use eye-tracking to predict autism?

Many researchers have found that autistic children prefer to look at different things than typically developing children. This is called gaze preference. In fact, gaze preference changes can be detected prior to the onset of autism. Researchers have been using eye-tracking devices to record where babies gaze when viewing videos of social scenes. And they have been using this device not to diagnose autism, but to predict autism.

A 2013 study using an eye-tracking device found that differences in gaze preference can be detected in infants as young as two months. When viewing videos, the infants who look at mouths more than eyes and objects more than people are more likely to later be diagnosed with autism. These infants experienced a decline in attention to other people’s eyes.

The researchers from this study are working to replicate these findings in larger studies and are heading up the development of the eye-tracking device slated for clinical trials this year, and should the trials be successful, researchers will seek FDA approval for the device.

The device is noninvasive, relatively easy to use and portable. And it could provide a standardized, objective measure for predicting autism. In other words, it would be a pre-diagnostic tool. This means that, by identifying the possibility of autism early, eye-tracking devices could increase the chances that children will be officially diagnosed earlier. This would especially help children who tend to be diagnosed at later ages because of disparities related to race or geography.

In fact, researchers have suggested it could be used as part of a routine well baby checkup for 18- to 24-month-olds. And if the technology proves to be useful in predicting autism in infants, why wouldn’t the device one day be utilized even earlier for two- or six-months-olds? A pre-diagnostic assessment for autism could be easily built into regular checkups, instead of waiting for parents to report symptoms and get an appointment with a specialist. This could be a major leap forward for getting kids diagnosed early with ASD and started on therapy, or providing interventions even prior to the development of autistic traits.

What does ‘risk’ of autism mean?

Imagine your baby is assessed for pre-diagnostic autism with an eye-tracking device, and you learn that he or she is is likely to be later diagnosed with autism.

What does that mean? How should we talk to parents about this? And bear in mind that autism is highly variable and has a very wide range of both symptom profile and age of onset, which complicates how accurate such an assessment can be.

A positive assessment would indicate a higher likelihood of the child being diagnosed with autism. A negative one would indicate a lower likelihood. That is not the same thing as getting a diagnosis for autism in infancy. This is pre-diagnostic. A positive assessment could be used to justify an early therapeutic regimen even prior to an autism diagnosis. Early intervention can provide long-lasting improvements in the quality of life of the children, families and caregivers of children with autism. For pre-diagnosed children, the hope would be that intervening before the development of significant autistic traits would be even more beneficial.

The promise of having an opportunity to provide earlier intervention – perhaps earlier than ever before – and to implement this technology in routine community pediatric care requires that we consider the development of this technology very carefully.

For example, what exactly will parents be told upon receiving such an assessment? The word “risk” may fail to communicate the vast range of possible outcomes and instead place too much focus on negative outcomes related to an autism spectrum diagnosis (ASD). Not every child who receives a positive assessment after all will actually be diagnosed with autism (to be sure, even with a tool with as much promise as eye-tracking, there will be false positives).

We should be mindful of the effect a positive assessment (false positive or not) could have on a child and their family. In many cultures, for instance, a condition like autism would stigmatize an entire family.

In the absence of care and resources, especially for children so young, a positive assessment (even if the assessment if found to be wrong or a false positive) could be seen as more of a sentence rather an opportunity for intervention, a sentiment that could occur even within research trials.

How do you treat a child “pre-diagnosed” with autism?

While several research groups have raised the possibility of an objective test for toddlers using the eye-tracking device, eye-tracking has also been used in a preliminary study to predict autism in two- to six-month-olds. What if, in the future, babies are regularly assessed at younger ages, for which we do not yet have interventions? What could (and what should) a parent do in that situation?

There are currently no evidence-based interventions available for babies under 12 months. The next phase of studies following upcoming trials will involve testing the development of a novel early intervention for 12-month-olds. Other researchers are attempting to develop interventions for six-month-old infants.

A positive assessment might motivate parents to invest unnecessarily in expensive interventions, surveillance and treatments. It could also lead to changes in the life trajectories of the child, caregivers and entire families such as changes in their financial plans and reallocation of time and material resources to a child’s early intervention or care.

Even after a false positive (an assessment for high risk that is determined to be wrong) is identified and the likelihood of getting a diagnosis of autism is determined to be quite low, caregivers may be unable to stop looking for signs of autism as a child ages.

There are no autism-specific medications (because we still do not know the causes of autism), though drugs are frequently used to treat children for a variety of autism-related symptoms.

In fact, psychotropic drugs have been prescribed to children less than two years of age, and risks of these medications on early development have yet to be determined.

And adherents of a growing neurodiversity movement – an advocacy position that rejects notions that autism is unwanted and should be cured and, instead, acknowledges autism as a natural variant of human neurological development – would resist the use of “risk” in relation to ASD.

Not a diagnosis, but a pre-preexisting condition

Policymakers must consider the impact of the possible integration of these tools into regular pediatric practice and infant care as a new, community-wide pre-diagnostic assessment tool.

Predictive detection technologies such as these will present a new set of policy considerations. Will insurers pay for the test? If they do, will they pay for treatment and intervention afterwards? Because of the potential for long-term health-care savings, would there be penalties from insurers for not undergoing such an assessment? Right now, we just don’t know.

Keep in mind that insurers were not prohibited from denying people coverage for preexisting coverage until the Affordable Care Act (ACA) was passed. But with this test, we aren’t talking about a preexisting condition. We are talking about a predictive technology, a “pre” whose results essentially create a new category of health or illness, well before the condition even becomes a preexisting one. Think of it as a pre-preexisting condition. This situation is not addressed by the ACA.

The insurance implications can spread beyond childhood. How a predictive assessment will affect life insurance policies and long-term care insurance is unknown.

Because information about one’s brain health often feels especially identity-forming, privacy policies will need to be created to determine how pre-diagnostic information be kept and who will have access to the results of these assessments. Will schools, future employers or insurance agencies have access to this information?

As eye-tracking devices head toward clinical trials, it is critical to think about and address these concerns in a public forum and alongside the development of these technologies.

Without such a discussion, these tools, despite their enormous potential, risk losing resources and public support to be fully developed and advanced or risk being underused or not used properly at all.

Karen Rommelfanger is affiliated with the Center for Ethics which has collaborated with Marcus Autism Center.

Jennifer Sarrett worked closely with the Marcus Autism Center during her 2013-2014 role as Emory University's Center for Ethics' Neuroethics Scholar.

Authors: The Conversation

Read more http://theconversation.com/are-we-ready-for-a-test-that-could-pre-diagnose-autism-in-babies-44821

Inside Out: what universities can learn from Pixar about emotions

  • Written by The Conversation
imageWhat happens when disgust, anger and fear take control?©2015 Disney Pixar. All rights reserved.

The latest Disney Pixar film Inside Out takes the viewer inside the mind of an 11-year-old girl, Riley. Her brain’s “headquarters” are run by five emotions: joy, sadness, fear, anger and disgust. The film follows joy and sadness as...

Read more

More Articles ...

  1. Is world government the only hope?
  2. Where to put the first electric car charge station in the Sunshine State
  3. Politics aside, a simple carbon tax makes more sense than a convoluted emissions trading scheme
  4. The South Australian Living Artists Festival is like no other – see for yourself
  5. Welcome to blandsville? Myer and David Jones embrace grocery-style streamlining
  6. How to value research that crosses more than one discipline
  7. Don't fear the skyscraper – why London needs more tall buildings
  8. After Obama comes the big challenge for Africa's entrepreneurs
  9. Jack the Ripper, a women's history museum and London's fascination with all things gory
  10. Explainer: how viruses can fool the immune system
  11. Adam Goodes, dignity and Aboriginal men: what the research says
  12. Kenya is a breastfeeding success story but still has its challenges
  13. Policing plagiarism could make universities miss the real problems
  14. Chadian dictator's tactics mimic script of former rulers facing criminal charges
  15. American disease that's wreaking havoc on the Cape's honeybee population
  16. OECD survey strengthens case against VAT increase in South Africa
  17. Telstra on the TV casting couch to trump its telco peers
  18. Books at MIFF: how The Dressmaker was adapted into a film starring Kate Winslet
  19. VIDEO: Michelle Grattan on Bronwyn Bishop
  20. Stop, go back, the NDIS board shake-up is going the wrong way
  21. Ken Wilber a climate denier? Say it ain't so
  22. Here's an idea to chew over: GST reform should add meat to the tax buffet
  23. Building blocks of life found among organic compounds on Comet 67P – what Philae discoveries mean
  24. Self-building 3D printed bricks hint at future without assembly lines
  25. Digging deep into the past to see the future of climate change
  26. Should MOOCs be used as credit for high school?
  27. We all know and admire the Haka ... so why not one of our own?
  28. The five most common mistakes a growing company makes - and how to fix them
  29. Differences between men and women are more than the sum of their genes
  30. Reviewing an anachronism? Labor to debate future of socialist objective
  31. Grattan on Friday: Bishop adopts Abbott's tactic of contrition but absolution is something else
  32. Japan's 'sacred' rice farmers brace for Pacific trade deal's death sentence
  33. Give existing reforms a chance to kill patent trolls
  34. Extreme droughts weaken trees' ability to soak up carbon
  35. Hillary Clinton stakes out safe political ground with energy and climate plan
  36. Aircraft debris looks like it's from MH370 – now can we find the rest?
  37. Burma's path to democracy is being wrecked by lethal identity politics
  38. Climate change means we can't keep living (and working) in glass houses
  39. After the case of the disinherited daughter, is a will worth the paper it's written on?
  40. Why Greece's third bailout package is bound to fail
  41. China's stock market is so unstable, even the government can't control it
  42. Museums are becoming more playful ... in how they ask us for money
  43. Should we love Uber and Airbnb or protest against them?
  44. The debate over Cecil the lion should be about conservation, not hunting
  45. Is it a case of 'the younger, the better' for children learning a new language?
  46. Here's why scientists haven't invented an impossible space engine – despite what you may have read
  47. Lord Sewel affair is a symptom of Britain's broken democracy
  48. With so much vested in satellites, solar storms could bring life to a standstill
  49. Between a rock and a hard place: 2022 Winter Olympics decision
  50. Which paintings were the most creative of their time? An algorithm may hold the answers

Business News

Workplace Health Checks: A Smart Investment for Small Business Success

Running a small business means every team member counts and when poor health leads to absenteeism or low energy, productivity and profits take a hit. Lost workdays, rising healthcare costs, and staff ...

Daily Bulletin - avatar Daily Bulletin

Rising Demand: Why Melbourne Needs More Electricians Now

Melbourne is running on change. Rooftops are filling with solar, carports are getting charge points, and older switchboards are being rebuilt so homes and shops can carry smarter, heavier loads. If yo...

Daily Bulletin - avatar Daily Bulletin

What Designers Really Think About Your Current Marketing Collateral

Key Takeaways: Designers notice structure, typography, and colour choices before the content itself Consistency across all collateral strengthens brand recognition and builds trust Overly bu...

Daily Bulletin - avatar Daily Bulletin

LayBy Deals