Independent Autism Study Survives Peer Review, Published
A NOTE TO GHOULS: THIS ONE WON'T BE RETRACTED EITHER.
The peer-reviewed, open-access journal Science, Public Health Policy & the Law is pleased to announce that their objective peer review process has vetted another study.
Should you care to contribute to that effort, please consider subscribing to the journal and helping others find the subscription page.
see Science, Public Health Policy & the Law (ipak-edu.org)
Sincerely,
James Lyons-Weiler, Editor-in-Chief, SciPublHealthLaw
Current Volume 2023 | Science, Public Heal (publichealthpolicyjournal.com)
FULL CITATION: Blaxill, M, T. Rogers, and C. Nevison. 2023. Autism Tsunami: The Impact of Rising Prevalence on the Societal Cost of Autism in the United States. Science, Public Health Policy & the Law 4:227-256.
Abstract
As the rates of diagnosed autism spectrum disorders (ASD) reach unprecedented levels, numerous analyses have attempted to model, quantify, and forecast the societal cost of ASD at the country level. These forecast models focus on costs by category and over the lifespan, but place far less emphasis on the effect of rising ASD rates on societal costs over time. Most models make the unsupported assumption that rates have remained constant. As a result, these models obscure understanding and suppress awareness of the most urgent societal issues that surround rising ASD prevalence. Furthermore, they overstate the current costs incurred for the population of adults with ASD, while simultaneously and dramatically underestimating the magnitude of future costs as the ASD population increases. The cost of ASD in the U.S. is estimated here using a forecast model that, for the first time, accounts for the true historical increase in ASD. Model inputs include ASD prevalence, census population projections, six cost categories, ten age brackets, inflation projections, and three future prevalence scenarios. Current ASD costs are somewhat lower and projected future costs are much higher than other societal cost of autism models. In this model, total base-case costs of $223 (175–271) billion/year are estimated in 2020; $589 billion/year in 2030, $1.36 trillion/year in 2040, and $5.54 (4.29–6.78) trillion/year by 2060, with substantial potential savings through ASD prevention via identifying and better regulating environmental factors that increase autism risk. This tsunami of rapidly increasing costs raises pressing policy questions. Rising prevalence, the shift from child to adult-dominated costs, the transfer of costs from parents onto government, and the soaring total costs demand an urgent focus on prevention strategies.
YAY!!
What would (will!) it take to beat the psychopaths behind the tsunami?