According
to Natural
News, autism and autism spectrum disorder (ASD) are terms
used to describe a constellation of developmental brain disorders characterized
by a spectrum of behavioral deficits including problems in social interaction,
problems with communication both verbally and non-verbally, and repetitive,
often harmful behaviors.
The
DSM-V, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders 5th Edition, has
merged all distinct autism subtypes into one simplified diagnosis, ASD.
The
mainstream media, Big Pharma and the CDC are desperately trying to convince the
American public that there isn't an autism epidemic. Instead, the official
cover-up explanation is that what we are actually seeing is an "increased
awareness" of autism, not an epidemic.
In
other words, no need to worry; autism has been with us all along at comparable
rates; it was merely underdiagnosed.
How
common is autism?
1 in
68 children have been diagnosed with autism (1 in 42 boys). Diagnosis of autism
is becoming more prevalent. Autism is the fastest-growing developmental
disability in the U.S. Boys are nearly five times more likely than girls to
develop autism. There is no allopathic medical detection or cure for autism.
For more information, log onto:
Developer
Roy Keating has spent a decade designing a new monitoring device that aids
people on the autism spectrum in living an independent life. He developed some
of the first artificial-intelligence-based software in the 1980s for Wall Street.
This
program runs on motion sensors that are placed in the home and feed data
through a software program to analyze and determine if daily tasks were
performed. The project launched this summer is called “yrConnected” and will
focus on the senior market.
He
has begun to integrate the Picture Planner program developed by his brother Tom
Keating, who is CEO of Cognitopia.
Picture Planner is an electronic picture-based icon scheduler which helps
others to remember to complete their tasks.
To
see some fascinating and interesting clips regarding the horrifying truth about
autism and its serious consequences, one can easily log onto:
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