A Dedication to Developmental Disabilities in Georgia Since 2003: Restoring Hope and Dignity........ One Life at a Time:
Woman with Down syndrome fulfills dream of presenting weather on TV
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Melanie Segard: There is Ability in Disability
A young woman with Down syndrome
fulfilled her lifelong dream when she stepped in front of a
green screen to read the weather forecast on national television for the
first time. Learn more...
(CNN REPORT): Forget horoscopes or fortune tellers. There's a new way to tell your future, and it involves a much more reliable medium: human neuroscience. A new study looks at over 70 scientific publications about brain scans such as functional magnetic resonance imaging or electroencephalography, noninvasive tests that measure brain activity. The paper that runs in the latest edition of Neuron concludes that doctors might have more success treating some patients if they examined the way a person's brain functioned first. Brain scans have been used to make basic discoveries about human behavior for decades, but they are not routinely ordered to determine someone's overall health or course of treatment in the way as blood test are used. This new study suggests technology in this area has become so advanced that approaches to treatment would be more effective if brain scans were used more routinely. For instance, when someone is being treated f...
Autism There is no cure for autism. So, products or treatments claiming to “cure” autism do not work as claimed; t he Food and Drug Administration (FDA) warned. The National Institutes of Health (NIH) describe children with autism as having difficulties with social interaction, displaying problems with verbal and nonverbal communication, exhibiting repetitive behaviors and having narrow, obsessive interests. Learn more....
As per the new government figures, more American children are being diagnosed with Autism. In a recent release from Center for Disease Control and Prevention, 1 in 59 children are on the spectrum. This is up from the last estimate of 1 in 68 reported in 2016 and 1 in 150 at the start of the century. The increase in autism prevalence could be attributable to better identification among minority children.
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