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By
LINDSEY TANNER
CHICAGO -- Within days of their birth, healthy
babies will look you in the eye. By 4 months,
they will delight in others. And by 9 months,
they will exchange smiles. Jacob Day did none
of those things.
"We used to say it was like it burned his
eyes to look at you," said his mother, Tamie
Day of Antelope, Calif. "It was like a physically
painful thing for him. It wasn't just that he
wasn't looking at us; he was purposefully looking
away."
Day, who has a psychology degree, suspected her
son might have autism. She enrolled him in a study,
published in April, that found that babies like
Jacob are indeed at high risk for autism if they
do not respond to their names by 12 months of
age.
At 18 months, he was formally diagnosed with
autism, about a year earlier than usual. Before
he turned 2, Jacob began daily intensive behavior
treatment designed to help him lead a more normal
life.
He is part of a growing field in psychiatry called
infant mental health. Doctors and scientists are
increasingly looking for early signs in babies
of autism, attention deficit disorder and other
mental problems that just a generation ago, scarcely
anyone thought could appear in children so young.
Some scientists even believe that intensive treatment
in some susceptible babies can actually prevent
autism, attention deficit disorder and other problems.
An influential Institute of Medicine report in
2000 helped energize this idea. The report emphasized
the plasticity of babies' brains. It also explained
how interacting with babies can change their brain
wiring.
"We used to say `nature versus nurture,'
but now people really think it's 'nature through
nurture,'" said the University of Chicago's
Dr. Lawrence Gray.
Tamie Day noticed the first ominous clue the
night she and her husband, Chris, brought Jacob
home after his birth.
"We walked in the door and he wouldn't stop
looking at our ceiling fan," she said. "The
next day, that's all he would look at."
Babies typically begin making eye contact soon
after birth, and "understand at a basic,
perhaps hardwired level, that eyes are special
-- they look more at eyes than at other parts
of the face," said Sally Ozonoff, an autism
specialist at the University of California at
Davis' MIND Institute.
When his mother expressed her autism concerns
at Jacob's 6-month checkup, the doctor said "we
were being a little overzealous," Day said.
Still, there was no pointing, no clapping, no
shared smiles, and when Jacob would laugh, it
seemed like his own private joke. So his parents
sought out UC-Davis specialists, who gave them
the heartbreaking diagnosis.
Jacob, now 3 1/2, has made meaningful progress
thanks to treatment, his mother said, including
a breakthrough moment at age 2. It still makes
her cry to recall it.
She was giving Jacob a bath, playing the "itsy
bitsy spider" finger game, when he looked
up and really gazed into her eyes. "He was
smiling up at me and I realized that was the first
time he had done that," she said. "He
has gorgeous blue eyes, and I was like, `My God,
your eyes are so beautiful.'"
Interest in infant mental health has been boosted
by awareness of the prevalence of attention deficit
disorders and autism, which government officials
said in February affects 1 in 150 U.S. children
and may be more common than previously thought.
In April, researchers from the federal Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention and the Interdisciplinary
Council on Developmental and Learning Disorders
presented a report emphasizing earlier diagnosis
and treatment.
The report said that about 17 percent of U.S.
children have a developmental disability such
as autism, mental retardation and attention deficit-hyperactivity
disorder, but that fewer than half are diagnosed
before starting school.
The authors say warning signs include failure
to:
_focus on sights and sounds by 2 months.
_initiate joyful behavior with parents by 4 months.
_exchange smiles and sounds with parents by 8
to 9 months.
_take a parent's hand to find a toy and point
to objects by 12 to 16 months.
Last year, the American Academy of Pediatrics
recommended that pediatricians routinely evaluate
children for developmental problems such as autism
starting in infancy, and begin testing at age
9 months.
"Waiting until a young child misses a major
milestone such as walking or talking may result
in late rather than early recognition ... depriving
the child and family of the benefits of early
identification and intervention," the academy
said.
Some critics worry that the trend will trigger
needless diagnoses in children with normal variations
in behavior.
Dr. Michael Fitzpatrick, a London physician,
said that while early recognition and treatment
of true disorders are important, "the extension
of these categories to include 20 to 30 percent
of all children reflects a social trend of pathologizing
and medicalizing children's lives, which seems
to reflect difficulties of parents and teachers
in dealing with familiar problems of childhood
development."
Dr. Stanley Greenspan, a psychiatry professor
at George Washington University who co-authored
the CDC-Interdisciplinary group report, said the
idea is not to slap a label on babies and give
them medication. Greenspan said the goal is to
raise awareness about early warning signs and
to encourage treatment to increase the chances
that children can develop normally.
Research on identifying early clues and testing
treatments is booming. For example:
_Dr. Fred Volkmar at Yale University is studying
potential ways to diagnose autism in the first
months of life, including whether looking at objects
rather than people is a sign. "I think we're
on the verge of being able to do a much better
job" of diagnosing autism in infancy, Volkmar
said.
_Researcher Stephen Porges at the University
of Illinois at Chicago is starting a five-year
study of whether excessive crying past 6 months
of age might be an early sign of autism, attention
deficit or other behavior problems.
_Greenspan is launching a multimillion-dollar
study involving parents and babies at risk for
autism or attention deficit disorder. One group
will receive intensive behavior training, the
other will not; both will be compared through
age 5.
While rigorous scientific evidence is needed
to prove that early intervention succeeds, Greenspan
said his work with patients has shown promise.
Jacob didn't say his first word, "more,"
until he was in treatment and almost 2 -- about
a year later than normal. He didn't say "mama"
until he was 3.
He gets 33 hours of weekly home treatment with
trained college students, including six hours
most days. The tab is $70,000 yearly, paid for
by California, one of the few states that pay,
through state and federal funds, for early intensive
autism treatment.
Jacob's sessions involve lots of repetition,
and rewards, including praise and treats, for
a job well done. For example, to improve eye contact,
teachers bounce him on a favorite giant ball,
then stop. If he turns to look at them, he gets
praise, maybe a piece of candy, and more bouncing.
To teach language, they use activities like swinging
that get him excited enough to make sounds, then
offer rewards for sounds like vowels or consonants
rather than humming. Then they name objects, encourage
mimicking, and offer more rewards.
Now he knows the alphabet, understands commands
like "Bring me the cow and the horse toy,"
and can say simple sentences like "I want
juice," his mother said.
"We definitely hope to mainstream him. We
hope that he will have a job and have a life where
he can take care of himself and be happy,"
Day said. "Everyone has given us reason to
believe that's not an outlandish expectation."
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