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The ABC has a page with links to its autism news - see https://www.abc.net.au/news/topic/autism-spectrum-disorder
Bob Buckley
The Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) released new information about autistic people in Australia. The information comes from data collect for the Survey of Disability, Ageing and Carers (SDAC) in 2015.
The ABS reports
A Cambridge professor fears the basic human rights of autistic people are not being met.
In a speech marking Autism Awareness Week, Professor Simon Baron-Cohen, Director of the Autism Research Centre at the University of Cambridge, told the United Nations in New York today, that even with the UN Convention on the Rights of People with Disabilities having been adopted in 2006, people with autism still do not enjoy human rights to the same extent as everyone else.
Tasmania has the highest rate of people living with autism in Australia.
New Australian Bureau of Statistics data for 2015, released on Wednesday, showed an estimated 1 per cent of the population in both Tasmania and South Australia had autism, the country’s highest rate.
The lowest was 0.5 per cent in Western Australia.
Kathleen Murray
My then five-year-old son was diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) around the time in 2007 the United Nations declared April 2 as World Autism Awareness Day (WAAD). He was on the cusp of school and I worried what the diagnosis meant for his future.
Nowra Public School has doubled their students intake since opening an autism unit only a year ago and that figure looks set to triple in the next 12 months.
There are 14 students enrolled in the unit, with a maximum of seven in each class.
“Since last year we have had another class start,” Nowra Public School teacher Sue Griffin said.
Warren Thomson
A MOTHER was left “mortified” after her son who has autism was kicked off a bus and left on his own in Dural.
Melissa Hewitson’s 16-year-old son Tyler routinely catches a bus from Old Northern Road, Dural to Pennant Hills Station as part of his morning commute to Hornsby TAFE four times a week.
But on Friday, March 17, Tyler’s Opal card had insufficient funds. Instead of letting him tap on and stay on the bus, the bus driver told him to get off.
“I was mortified that they could chuck a kid off the bus,” Ms Hewitson said.
The number of Australians diagnosed with autism increased by 42 per cent between 2012 and 2015, but research and advocacy groups are adamant it's not a cause for alarm.
The national disability insurance scheme is required to fully fund any supports or services it has deemed “reasonable and necessary”, according to a landmark decision handed down in the federal court on Tuesday.
When you think of someone with autism, what do you think of? It might be someone with a special set of talents or unique skills – such as natural artistic ability or a remarkable memory. It could also be someone with enhanced abilities in engineering or mathematics, or an increased focus on detail.
Autism Aspergers Advocacy Australia (A4) supports AFDO and others in the disability sector ...
The Australian Federation of Disability Organisations (AFDO) today joined calls from across the disability sector for a Royal Commission into the violence, abuse and neglect experienced by Australians with disability.