Latest News

Kennedy to study environmental factors in autism

Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the U.S. Secretary of Health, said on Wednesday he intends to commission a number of studies in order to identify environmental factors that contribute to autism. He claims these are related to its increasing prevalence across the nation.

Kennedy, speaking at his first Press Conference since becoming Secretary of Health and Human Services said that the studies will examine mold, air and water, food, medicine and ultrasounds as well as parental risk factors such age, obesity and diabetes.

Kennedy spoke a day after U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention published a data-analysis showing that the prevalence of autism in the U.S. for 8-year olds by 2022 was 1 in 31. The data were published in CDC's Weekly Report.

Autism is not known to have a cause, but experts believe it may be a result of combining genetic and environmental factors. The increase in autism rates is attributed by many experts to the widespread screening of children and the inclusion of a wider variety behaviors when defining the condition.

Kennedy, a former lawyer for the environment, has promoted a link between vaccines, and autism, which is now debunked.

He set a deadline of September for the U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH) to determine the causes behind the increase in U.S. Autism rates. However, he said that by then, "some of these answers" will be available.

Previous reports have indicated that the government plans to study the vaccines for measles, rubella, and mumps, as well as autism. Earlier scientific studies found no connection between vaccines, autism and previous scientific studies.

Kennedy said he will also move the monitoring of autism rates from the CDC to the newly formed Administration for a Healthy America that he supervises directly. The CDC has previously enjoyed a degree of independence from HHS.

Kennedy referred to the rise in autism as a pandemic, but patient advocates and scientist disagreed.

The Autism Society is a patient advocacy organization that says the increasing rates are not an outbreak but rather a reflection of diagnostic progress and the need for screenings to be available at a younger age.

The Autism Science Foundation released a press release that said researchers are currently investigating how environmental factors could work both independently and together with genes to cause Autism.

Last week, a study confirmed that diabetes during pregnancy increases the risk of neurological and brain problems, including autism, in children. Reporting by Ahmed Aboulenein, Manas Mihsra, Julie Steenhuysen, and Sarah Morland, Washington. Additional reporting by Sarah Morland, Washington. Editing by Caroline Humer and Nancy Lapid.

(source: Reuters)