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Sam’s autistic but he doesn’t need a cure, he’s just different

By bobb |

Sam Davis wants to groom elephants when he is older, taught himself to read before the age of five and is autistic.

These are just some of the elements that make the five-year-old who he is, says mother Jessica Davis, who has made it her mission to intervene as little as possible in his condition.

“Something we did from the diagnosis is say: no, this is Sam and this is who he is,” Ms Davis said. “We have tried from day dot to see how he operates in the world — he just has some differences.”

Gluten- and casein-free diet makes a meal of autism science

By bobb |

by Andrew Whitehouse

From the moment a child is diagnosed with autism, their family enters the unknown. Conference halls are lined with salespeople, letterboxes are stuffed with pamphlets, and life is transformed into a whirlwind tour of a fantastical array of therapies and potions that are positioned as the “cure all” for their child’s difficulties.

Children with disabilities risk being misdiagnosed in order to receive school funding support

By convenor |

In Australia, children with disabilities only receive additional government funding if they fall into a recognised disability category. As a result, schools and parents often come under pressure to obtain the “right” diagnosis for their child. Such misdiagnosis carries a hidden cost.

Donald Grey Triplett: The first boy diagnosed as autistic

By bobb |

Donald Grey Triplett was the first person to be diagnosed with autism. The fulfilling life he has led offers an important lesson for today, John Donvan and Caren Zucker write.

After Rain Man, and The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time, the next great autism portrayal the stage or screen might want to consider taking on is the life of one Donald Grey Triplett, an 82-year-old man living today in a small town in the southern United States, who was there at the very beginning, when the story of autism began.

Making sense of the common ‘disorder’ autism

By bobb |

The autistic brain is a beautiful mess. There are more synapses in this lump of grey matter than in an ordinary brain. It’s these connections between the brain’s neurons — which regulate signals — that orchestrate the overwhelming sensitivity to outside stimuli.

Noises are louder, smells are stronger, touch is more invasive, light is brighter. For the autistic person, there is a pervasive intensity to the experience of the world around them that makes living in it that much more difficult.

NDIS may be ‘open to legal action’ on autism

By bobb |

Brisbane oncologist James Morton — an authority on early intervention — told The Weekend Australian there is a “very real risk” the agency responsible for the NDIS will leave itself open to litigation if it can’t settle the parameters of early intervention.

“The academics and the funding providers need to sit down and do a workshop and fix this,” he said.

It's my party: girls with autism finally get an invitation

By bobb |

Imagine a childhood without birthday parties invitations; no costumes, giddy sugar highs, warp-speed present unwrapping or hysterical camaraderie.

Sadly, for children with autism, invitations can be few and far between.

They have so much to offer; they are loyal, inspiring and positive. It's just harder to get to know them. 

Katie Koullas

It was during her daughter's first year at school that Katie Koullas​ came to the heartbreaking realisation her daughter Mia, now six  was not being invited to parties.