The average administrative prevalence of autism among children increased from 0.6 to 3.1 per 1000 from 1994 to 2003. By 2003, only 17 states had a special education prevalence of autism that was within the range of recent epidemiological estimates. During the same period, the prevalence of mental retardation and learning disabilities declined by 2.8 and 8.3 per 1000, respectively. Higher autism prevalence was significantly associated with corresponding declines in the prevalence of mental retardation and learning disabilities. The declining prevalence of mental retardation and learning disabilities from 1994 to 2003 represented a significant downward deflection in their preexisting trajectories of prevalence from 1984 to 1993. California was one of a handful of states that did not clearly follow this pattern.
Sunday, March 23, 2008
Autism as Diagnostic Substitution
Half Sigma cites a two-year-old paper from Pediatrics to explain the autism "epidemic" as a change in diagnostic categories, rather than any known increase in the incidence of autism. The Contribution of Diagnostic Substitution to the Growing Administrative Prevalence of Autism in US Special Education reported the following results:
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