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Special Young People Thread...

sweetiepie

Alfrescian
Loyal
i wasn't joking when i mentioned autism is genetically linked to chromosome 6.9. of course, these studies are not final and conclusive, but they point to a possible breakthrough in dna research linking autism to genetic causes. more r&d funding are being poured into this subject, thanks to results and findings from these independent studies.

Autism links on chromosome 7
Revised DNA sequence homes in on break points.
Hannah Hoag

View attachment 53651
A revamp of chromosome 7's DNA sequence has brought to light genes associated with autism, several leukaemias and lymphomas1.

Geneticist Stephen Scherer, of the University of Toronto, and his colleagues identified the site of more than 100 new mutations linked to genetic disorders after studying the genetic makeup of more than 300 new patients and reviewing 1,570 published studies.

Doctors will be able to log onto a new dynamic database in which the sequence anomalies are held, and determine whether a patient's genetic make-up matches those of others. As information is added to the free-access database, more mutations may stand out. "It's a quick way to identify candidate genes for a disorder," Scherer says.

Some of the mutations seen in patients with autism have turned up in genes related to speech and communication, others are close to genes that enable neurons to communicate.
“A single gene change doesn't seem to be sufficient in most families”​
The genetics of autism is complex, warns Beth Rosen-Sheidley of the Tufts-New England Medical Center in Boston. "A single gene change doesn't seem to be sufficient in most families." Any test for the disease would be difficult to interpret, she says. "It's a bit of a quagmire. One marker for the disease might increase the risk, but by how much?"

To produce a precise map, Scherer's team started with the draft chromosome 7 sequence published by the private company Celera Genomics2. They then filled in many of the gaps with data from the international public consortium3.

The researchers admit that the resulting sequence is not completely finished, but reckon that it is in good shape. Others feel, however, that it has some way to go.

https://www.nature.com/news/2003/030407/full/news030407-10.html

Identification of Chromosome 7 Inversion Breakpoints in an Autistic Family Narrows Candidate Region for Autism Susceptibility
Abstract
Chromosomal breaks and rearrangements have been observed in conjunction with autism and autistic spectrum disorders. A chromosomal inversion has been previously reported in autistic siblings, spanning the region from approximately 7q22.1 to 7q31. This family is distinguished by having multiple individuals with autism and associated disabilities. The region containing the inversion has been strongly implicated in autism by multiple linkage studies, and has been particularly associated with language defects in autism as well as in other disorders with language components. Mapping of the inversion breakpoints by FISH has localized the inversion to the region spanning approximately 99–108.75Mb of chromosome 7. The proximal breakpoint has the potential to disrupt either the coding sequence or regulatory regions of a number of cytochrome P450 genes while the distal region falls in a relative gene desert. Copy number variant analysis of the breakpoint regions detected no duplication or deletion that could clearly be associated with disease status. Association analysis in our autism data set using single nucleotide polymorphisms located near the breakpoints showed no significant association with proximal breakpoint markers, but has identified markers near the distal breakpoint (~108–110Mb) with significant associations to autism. The chromosomal abnormality in this family strengthens the case for an autism susceptibility gene in the chromosome 7q22-31 region and targets a candidate region for further investigation.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4441209/

CHROMOSOME 7

Individuals who carry an extra copy of 7q11.23, the genetic region on chromosome 7 that is missing in those with Williams syndrome, have language impairments and other autism-like social difficulties.
Relevance to autism:
Although deletion of 7q11.23 leads to Williams syndrome, duplication of the region resembles autism. Of 14 children with 7q11.23 duplication syndrome, all have problems speaking, 7 have mild or moderate mental retardation, and 6 have either been formally diagnosed with autism or have autism-like features, such as poor eye contact or trouble with social interactions1.
GTF21, a gene within the 7q11.23 region, interacts with DLX5 and DLX6 — transcription factors implicated in autism2.
Other autism-implicated genes on chromosome 7 include AUTS2, CNTNAP2 and FOXP2. AUTS2 has been linked to autism in various gene association studies3.
A 2010 study shows that a variant of CNTNAP2 may alter the brain to emphasize connections between nearby regions and diminish those between more distant ones4.
Variants in CNTNAP2 also affect the timing of language development in the general population5.
FOXP2 is linked to language development and regulates CNTNAP2 gene expression.
Williams syndrome:
Deletion of the 7q11.2 region leads to the autism-related disorder, Williams syndrome. Children with Williams syndrome have a range of cognitive symptoms, including a happy and highly social demeanor, developmental delay and strong language skills. They also have cardiovascular symptoms and facial dysmorphology, such as a small nose with a flattened bridge and a small chin6.
GTF2I is one of a handful of genes that researchers consider to be key players in Williams syndrome. The protein it encodes is a transcription factor, affecting the expression of other genes, but its precise role is unknown7.
One child with Williams syndrome lacks one copy of all the genes on the 7q11.2 region except for GTF21, for which she has two functional copies. The girl has facial features characteristic of Williams syndrome and a heart defect, but no developmental delay. By the time the girl was 2 years old, her caretakers confirmed that she has normal social behavior: She is shy around strangers and doesn’t stare at other people’s eyes.
https://www.spectrumnews.org/wiki/chromosome-7/

Gene on Chromosome 7 Associated With Autism : Three studies show that the integrity of neuroligin-neurexin axis is critical for normal development.
Publish date: February 1, 2008
By Mary Ann Moon

Three independent studies implicate the CNTNAP2 gene on chromosome 7 as an autism-susceptibility gene, researchers reported.

The three studies used different strategies to examine the possible genetic basis for autism, and all independently arrived at the same conclusion: Variations–some common and some rare–in the CNTNAP2 gene predispose carriers to autism.

“It will be important to begin to characterize the genotype-phenotype correlations across this gene so that we may begin to use CNTNAP2 as a diagnostic and prognostic tool,” Dr. Dietrich A. Stephan said in an editorial comment accompanying the three reports (Am. J. Hum. Genet. 2008;82:7-9).

“These preliminary findings lead one to speculate whether early detection of CNTNAP2 mutation carriers, coupled with early intervention, could coax children through a critical period in development (12-24 months of age) and allow them to emerge undamaged and continue to develop normally thereafter,” said Dr. Stephan of the Translational Genomics Research Institute, Phoenix.

In the first study, Maricela Alarcón, Ph.D., of the University of California, Los Angeles, Center for Autism Research and Treatment and her associates built on their previous finding linking a region of chromosome 7q35 that contains approximately 200 known genes with language deficits and autism spectrum disorders. They first genotyped the region in 172 parent-child trios from the Autism Genetics Research Exchange database on 2,758 single nucleotide polymorphisms. This narrowed the search to four likely candidate genes, including CNTNAP2.

This gene was already suspected of being involved in autism since it is a member of the neurexin superfamily; in case studies, mutations in these genes have been linked to severe autism, temporal lobe seizures, language regression, and repetitive behaviors.

The researchers then tested a different set of 304 parent-child trios and confirmed that only the CNTNAP2 gene significantly correlated with a delay in language acquisition–specifically, the age at which carriers used their first word. The investigators then identified a rare microdeletion within CNTNAP2 that was present in an autistic child and his father but not in 1,000 control chromosomes.

Dr. Alarcón and her associates also examined regional gene expression in human fetal brains, and found that CNTNAP2 was highly restricted to areas “known to contribute to complex human behaviors including speech and language, reward, frontal executive function, as well as joint attention, a core deficit in autism spectrum disorders.”

“Our demonstration of the developmental expression of CNTNAP2 being confined to brain circuitry known to be disrupted in autism spectrum disorders provides, to our knowledge for the first time, a link between genetic risk for language dysfunction in autism and specific brain regions known to underlie core processes impaired in this disorder,” the investigators noted (Am. J. Hum. Genet. 2008;82:150-9).

In the second study, Dan E. Arking, Ph.D., of Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, and his associates genotyped 72 families with multiple affected children in the National Institute of Mental Health Autism Genetics Initiative database.

They confined their analysis to the most strict phenotypic inclusion criteria ever used in a sample of that size, “which allowed [the] subtle association to be detected without genomewide background noise,” Dr. Stephan said.

Dr. Arking and his associates identified one common single nucleotide polymorphism, rs7794745, in the CNTNAP2 gene that was significantly associated with autism. They then confirmed the finding by genotyping a separate sample of 1,295 parent-child trios from the database. The researchers also found that transmission frequency was significantly greater from mothers than from fathers.

“It is likely that additional genetic variants in this gene that contribute to autism susceptibility remain to be discovered,” Dr. Arking and his associates said (Am. J. Hum. Genet. 2008;82:160-4).

In the third study, Dr. Betul Bakkaloglu of Yale University, New Haven, Conn., and associates mapped balanced rearrangements in children who had social and cognitive delays “as a means of identifying candidate genes that may harbor rare disease alleles.” They found an inversion of chromosome 7 in a mentally retarded child with autistic features, and further analysis showed disruption in the CNTNAP2 gene at 7q35.

Dr. Bakkaloglu and associates then resequenced all 24 exons of CNTNAP2 in a sample of 635 subjects with autism spectrum disorders and 942 controls. They found eight rare variants predicted to have an adverse effect on the gene's function. These variants occurred twice as often in affected subjects as in controls.

One particular deleterious variant, I869T, was found in four autistic children from three different families, but was not present in more than 4,000 chromosomes assessed in controls, Dr. Bakkaloglu and associates said (Am. J. Hum. Genet. 2008;82:165-73).

“Now that we have definitive evidence from several perspectives that integrity of the neuroligin-neurexin axis is critical for normal development, we must launch into a candidate gene-resequencing effort to fully describe mutations in the other members of these gene families in autism spectrum disorders,” Dr. Stephan noted.
https://www.mdedge.com/psychiatry/a...ssociated-autism-three-studies-show-integrity
KNN there are cases whereby autism was developed at much later stage KNN my uncle knew someone who developed it at 16yo and before that at early age he was a very normal person KNN
 

LordElrond

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
“Women above 30 should not have kids”
Eh... 90% of Sinkies women give birth after 30. More and more after 40. In fact, a high percentage of Downs kids are from young minah mothers because they have no money to go for regular checkup. Older women => Down’s syndrome kids is true in terms of probability, not reality. Because they tend to be more careful and thorough in their checkups.

“And of course since special needs are just a BS term for retarded children the gahmen should be implementing policies to prevent such births”
Eh... no government in the world can prevent such births. Only amniocentesis is 100% accurate in detecting this, but this is invasive and not all parents want to do that. Mind you, autism cannot be detected.

“All preggies need to under the full medical test for the foetus” What is full? All Sinkies already undergoing more rigorous tests than the Ang moh countries. Visual ultra sound are done regularly here. In the west, because prenatal are covered by the state, they are much less extensive.

“If the test is not positive like downs syndrome etc. The foetus should be aborted. Also no benefits etc are to be given to retards. That way the full financial burden will discouraged such irresponsible parents from having the kid.”
That is why we should never vote for oppies.
I hope you are not in WP or SDP or PSP.

“Society should be improving with better quality individuals of social responsibility. Not social and economic parasites”
Agree... according to PAP the better quality individuals are all dressed in full white.

That is why I said, don’t offer advice on something you are clueless at.
 

Hypocrite-The

Alfrescian
Loyal
i wasn't joking when i mentioned autism is genetically linked to chromosome 6.9. of course, these studies are not final and conclusive, but they point to a possible breakthrough in dna research linking autism to genetic causes. more r&d funding are being poured into this subject, thanks to results and findings from these independent studies.

Autism links on chromosome 7
Revised DNA sequence homes in on break points.
Hannah Hoag

View attachment 53651
A revamp of chromosome 7's DNA sequence has brought to light genes associated with autism, several leukaemias and lymphomas1.

Geneticist Stephen Scherer, of the University of Toronto, and his colleagues identified the site of more than 100 new mutations linked to genetic disorders after studying the genetic makeup of more than 300 new patients and reviewing 1,570 published studies.

Doctors will be able to log onto a new dynamic database in which the sequence anomalies are held, and determine whether a patient's genetic make-up matches those of others. As information is added to the free-access database, more mutations may stand out. "It's a quick way to identify candidate genes for a disorder," Scherer says.

Some of the mutations seen in patients with autism have turned up in genes related to speech and communication, others are close to genes that enable neurons to communicate.
“A single gene change doesn't seem to be sufficient in most families”​
The genetics of autism is complex, warns Beth Rosen-Sheidley of the Tufts-New England Medical Center in Boston. "A single gene change doesn't seem to be sufficient in most families." Any test for the disease would be difficult to interpret, she says. "It's a bit of a quagmire. One marker for the disease might increase the risk, but by how much?"

To produce a precise map, Scherer's team started with the draft chromosome 7 sequence published by the private company Celera Genomics2. They then filled in many of the gaps with data from the international public consortium3.

The researchers admit that the resulting sequence is not completely finished, but reckon that it is in good shape. Others feel, however, that it has some way to go.

https://www.nature.com/news/2003/030407/full/news030407-10.html

Identification of Chromosome 7 Inversion Breakpoints in an Autistic Family Narrows Candidate Region for Autism Susceptibility
Abstract
Chromosomal breaks and rearrangements have been observed in conjunction with autism and autistic spectrum disorders. A chromosomal inversion has been previously reported in autistic siblings, spanning the region from approximately 7q22.1 to 7q31. This family is distinguished by having multiple individuals with autism and associated disabilities. The region containing the inversion has been strongly implicated in autism by multiple linkage studies, and has been particularly associated with language defects in autism as well as in other disorders with language components. Mapping of the inversion breakpoints by FISH has localized the inversion to the region spanning approximately 99–108.75Mb of chromosome 7. The proximal breakpoint has the potential to disrupt either the coding sequence or regulatory regions of a number of cytochrome P450 genes while the distal region falls in a relative gene desert. Copy number variant analysis of the breakpoint regions detected no duplication or deletion that could clearly be associated with disease status. Association analysis in our autism data set using single nucleotide polymorphisms located near the breakpoints showed no significant association with proximal breakpoint markers, but has identified markers near the distal breakpoint (~108–110Mb) with significant associations to autism. The chromosomal abnormality in this family strengthens the case for an autism susceptibility gene in the chromosome 7q22-31 region and targets a candidate region for further investigation.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4441209/

CHROMOSOME 7

Individuals who carry an extra copy of 7q11.23, the genetic region on chromosome 7 that is missing in those with Williams syndrome, have language impairments and other autism-like social difficulties.
Relevance to autism:
Although deletion of 7q11.23 leads to Williams syndrome, duplication of the region resembles autism. Of 14 children with 7q11.23 duplication syndrome, all have problems speaking, 7 have mild or moderate mental retardation, and 6 have either been formally diagnosed with autism or have autism-like features, such as poor eye contact or trouble with social interactions1.
GTF21, a gene within the 7q11.23 region, interacts with DLX5 and DLX6 — transcription factors implicated in autism2.
Other autism-implicated genes on chromosome 7 include AUTS2, CNTNAP2 and FOXP2. AUTS2 has been linked to autism in various gene association studies3.
A 2010 study shows that a variant of CNTNAP2 may alter the brain to emphasize connections between nearby regions and diminish those between more distant ones4.
Variants in CNTNAP2 also affect the timing of language development in the general population5.
FOXP2 is linked to language development and regulates CNTNAP2 gene expression.
Williams syndrome:
Deletion of the 7q11.2 region leads to the autism-related disorder, Williams syndrome. Children with Williams syndrome have a range of cognitive symptoms, including a happy and highly social demeanor, developmental delay and strong language skills. They also have cardiovascular symptoms and facial dysmorphology, such as a small nose with a flattened bridge and a small chin6.
GTF2I is one of a handful of genes that researchers consider to be key players in Williams syndrome. The protein it encodes is a transcription factor, affecting the expression of other genes, but its precise role is unknown7.
One child with Williams syndrome lacks one copy of all the genes on the 7q11.2 region except for GTF21, for which she has two functional copies. The girl has facial features characteristic of Williams syndrome and a heart defect, but no developmental delay. By the time the girl was 2 years old, her caretakers confirmed that she has normal social behavior: She is shy around strangers and doesn’t stare at other people’s eyes.
https://www.spectrumnews.org/wiki/chromosome-7/

Gene on Chromosome 7 Associated With Autism : Three studies show that the integrity of neuroligin-neurexin axis is critical for normal development.
Publish date: February 1, 2008
By Mary Ann Moon

Three independent studies implicate the CNTNAP2 gene on chromosome 7 as an autism-susceptibility gene, researchers reported.

The three studies used different strategies to examine the possible genetic basis for autism, and all independently arrived at the same conclusion: Variations–some common and some rare–in the CNTNAP2 gene predispose carriers to autism.

“It will be important to begin to characterize the genotype-phenotype correlations across this gene so that we may begin to use CNTNAP2 as a diagnostic and prognostic tool,” Dr. Dietrich A. Stephan said in an editorial comment accompanying the three reports (Am. J. Hum. Genet. 2008;82:7-9).

“These preliminary findings lead one to speculate whether early detection of CNTNAP2 mutation carriers, coupled with early intervention, could coax children through a critical period in development (12-24 months of age) and allow them to emerge undamaged and continue to develop normally thereafter,” said Dr. Stephan of the Translational Genomics Research Institute, Phoenix.

In the first study, Maricela Alarcón, Ph.D., of the University of California, Los Angeles, Center for Autism Research and Treatment and her associates built on their previous finding linking a region of chromosome 7q35 that contains approximately 200 known genes with language deficits and autism spectrum disorders. They first genotyped the region in 172 parent-child trios from the Autism Genetics Research Exchange database on 2,758 single nucleotide polymorphisms. This narrowed the search to four likely candidate genes, including CNTNAP2.

This gene was already suspected of being involved in autism since it is a member of the neurexin superfamily; in case studies, mutations in these genes have been linked to severe autism, temporal lobe seizures, language regression, and repetitive behaviors.

The researchers then tested a different set of 304 parent-child trios and confirmed that only the CNTNAP2 gene significantly correlated with a delay in language acquisition–specifically, the age at which carriers used their first word. The investigators then identified a rare microdeletion within CNTNAP2 that was present in an autistic child and his father but not in 1,000 control chromosomes.

Dr. Alarcón and her associates also examined regional gene expression in human fetal brains, and found that CNTNAP2 was highly restricted to areas “known to contribute to complex human behaviors including speech and language, reward, frontal executive function, as well as joint attention, a core deficit in autism spectrum disorders.”

“Our demonstration of the developmental expression of CNTNAP2 being confined to brain circuitry known to be disrupted in autism spectrum disorders provides, to our knowledge for the first time, a link between genetic risk for language dysfunction in autism and specific brain regions known to underlie core processes impaired in this disorder,” the investigators noted (Am. J. Hum. Genet. 2008;82:150-9).

In the second study, Dan E. Arking, Ph.D., of Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, and his associates genotyped 72 families with multiple affected children in the National Institute of Mental Health Autism Genetics Initiative database.

They confined their analysis to the most strict phenotypic inclusion criteria ever used in a sample of that size, “which allowed [the] subtle association to be detected without genomewide background noise,” Dr. Stephan said.

Dr. Arking and his associates identified one common single nucleotide polymorphism, rs7794745, in the CNTNAP2 gene that was significantly associated with autism. They then confirmed the finding by genotyping a separate sample of 1,295 parent-child trios from the database. The researchers also found that transmission frequency was significantly greater from mothers than from fathers.

“It is likely that additional genetic variants in this gene that contribute to autism susceptibility remain to be discovered,” Dr. Arking and his associates said (Am. J. Hum. Genet. 2008;82:160-4).

In the third study, Dr. Betul Bakkaloglu of Yale University, New Haven, Conn., and associates mapped balanced rearrangements in children who had social and cognitive delays “as a means of identifying candidate genes that may harbor rare disease alleles.” They found an inversion of chromosome 7 in a mentally retarded child with autistic features, and further analysis showed disruption in the CNTNAP2 gene at 7q35.

Dr. Bakkaloglu and associates then resequenced all 24 exons of CNTNAP2 in a sample of 635 subjects with autism spectrum disorders and 942 controls. They found eight rare variants predicted to have an adverse effect on the gene's function. These variants occurred twice as often in affected subjects as in controls.

One particular deleterious variant, I869T, was found in four autistic children from three different families, but was not present in more than 4,000 chromosomes assessed in controls, Dr. Bakkaloglu and associates said (Am. J. Hum. Genet. 2008;82:165-73).

“Now that we have definitive evidence from several perspectives that integrity of the neuroligin-neurexin axis is critical for normal development, we must launch into a candidate gene-resequencing effort to fully describe mutations in the other members of these gene families in autism spectrum disorders,” Dr. Stephan noted.
https://www.mdedge.com/psychiatry/a...ssociated-autism-three-studies-show-integrity
Tat is good news. So if autism can be detected , than those detected during pregnancy can be aborted. That would be in the best interest of the child, the family n society as a whole
 

Hypocrite-The

Alfrescian
Loyal
“Women above 30 should not have kids”
Eh... 90% of Sinkies women give birth after 30. More and more after 40. In fact, a high percentage of Downs kids are from young minah mothers because they have no money to go for regular checkup. Older women => Down’s syndrome kids is true in terms of probability, not reality. Because they tend to be more careful and thorough in their checkups.

“And of course since special needs are just a BS term for retarded children the gahmen should be implementing policies to prevent such births”
Eh... no government in the world can prevent such births. Only amniocentesis is 100% accurate in detecting this, but this is invasive and not all parents want to do that. Mind you, autism cannot be detected.

“All preggies need to under the full medical test for the foetus” What is full? All Sinkies already undergoing more rigorous tests than the Ang moh countries. Visual ultra sound are done regularly here. In the west, because prenatal are covered by the state, they are much less extensive.

“If the test is not positive like downs syndrome etc. The foetus should be aborted. Also no benefits etc are to be given to retards. That way the full financial burden will discouraged such irresponsible parents from having the kid.”
That is why we should never vote for oppies.
I hope you are not in WP or SDP or PSP.

“Society should be improving with better quality individuals of social responsibility. Not social and economic parasites”
Agree... according to PAP the better quality individuals are all dressed in full white.

That is why I said, don’t offer advice on something you are clueless at.
Maybe that is why there are more special needs kids than before. All boils down to irresponsible breeding
 
Last edited:

Hypocrite-The

Alfrescian
Loyal
And with the world being more screwed up. Why have kids in the 1st place?

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Reconsidering having kids because of climate change? You’re not alone
MONDAY 11 FEBRUARY 2019 12:21AM

Jo Lauder By Jo Lauder
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One in three women under 30 involved in environmental groups are so worried about climate change and the future of the planet they are reconsidering having kids, according to a new survey.

The survey focused on women’s views on climate change ahead of this year’s federal election, and found nine out of ten of them were "extremely concerned" about the issue.

For women between 30 and 39 years, 22 per cent said they were reconsidering having children or more children because of climate change.

Over 6,500 women were quizzed for the survey, which was conducted by The Australian Conservation Foundation and 1 Million Women.

A school girl holds a sign saying: "There are no jobs on a dead planet".
Students gathered outside Melbourne's Parliament House as part of a national day of action on climate change on November 30, 2018.
ABC News: Andie Noonan
28-year-old Felicity Lochhead, who studies sustainability at university, says climate change is a major factor in her thinking about the future, and it’s the same for having kids.

“If I don’t take it [climate change] into account for that big decision, but I’m taking it into account for all these little decision in my life… it doesn’t make sense if I ignore it,” she told Hack.

“What I’m concerned about is that it’s beyond an environmental issue… it swells into those spheres of economic issues and social issues as well.”

Last year, the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, or the IPCC, warned the world has 12 years to act to avoid the catastrophic impacts of climate change.

Even if warming was stopped at 2 degrees above pre-industrial levels, the world will still be facing more extreme weather events - more bushfires, more droughts and floods, rising sea levels, and the loss of almost all the world’s coral reefs.

All this would happen in your children’s lifetime.

Danger: thin ice
How to cope with 'ecoanxiety'
Feeling a sense of doom about the planet's future? It's called "ecoanxiety".

21-year-old Mariah Appleby’s decision not to have kids is two-fold.

Firstly, she’s concerned about the future they will face without us addressing climate change.

Bringing a new human into this world, their future might not be guaranteed because of climate change and everything that’s happening.”
But she also made the decision not to have kids because of the carbon impact of having a kid and bringing another person onto the planet.

“The planet can’t sustain that many people we have now, and so bringing in more people is even more unsustainable,” she told Hack.

But her mum’s not a fan of the decision.

“My mum really wants grandkids but I’m like ‘sorry you’re not having any.’”

The Australian Conservation Foundation survey focused on women as research shows women will be disproportionately affected by climate change, and that Australian women are more likely than men to recognise climate change.

In Hack’s What’s Up In Your World survey of 11,000 Australians aged 18-29, women were doing more than men to help the environment.

And women were more likely to feel negative about the earth’s future: 73 per cent of females were slightly or extremely negative about it, compared to 56 per cent of men.

In today’s survey, only 2.8 per cent of women said they hadn’t been impacted in any way by climate change.

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Hypocrite-The

Alfrescian
Loyal
Bloody autistic kids. More trouble than they are worth...n now society will have to pay for them. Why can't the parents bear the responsibility? Why must general schools etc cater to them?
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High schools not prepared for coming 'tsunami' of children with autism: support group
7.30 BY TRACY BOWDEN
ABOUT 8 HOURS AGO
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Lachlan sitting at a desk with Heath Wild, going through some school work.
PHOTO Lachlan (left) goes through some school work with co-ordinator, Heath Wild.
ABC NEWS: JERRY RICKARD
High schools are not prepared for a "tsunami" of children with autism who need greater education options, an autism support group has warned.

Key points:
A large number of children with autism due to start high school
Autism Awareness Australia warns high schools not equipped for the influx
Parents in the Hunter Valley have organised to build a school their own children
"We've seen this coming," Nicole Rogerson of Autism Awareness Australia told 7.30.

"We know that this is a tsunami level of kids about to hit high school, and we're not prepared for it in any state in Australia."

She said there need to be more specialist schools at high school level, as well as more high schools with teachers trained to work with children with autism.

"Ideally, we would like every child with autism to be educated in their local school, but for some families that is not possible," Ms Rogerson said.

"We do need these specialist units, and we need to be real about how many kids we need to place in those and start planning accordingly."
Support for children to 'learn at their best'
Lara Cheney, Principal of Aspect Hunter School. Interviewed by 7.30, February 2019
PHOTO Aspect Hunter School Principal, Lara Cheney, wants the students to be able to reach their full potential.

ABC NEWS
Worried parents in the Hunter Valley, north of Sydney, have already decided to take matters into their own hands.

With no specialist high school in the area for children with autism, they decided to rally the community and build their own school.

Local businesses helped out with free materials and labour, and dozens of parents volunteered to help.

"We've had a painter turn up on his own that lives locally and offers to paint a few classrooms," the unofficial project manager, Hilton Grugeon, told 7.30.

"We had other businesses that send their workers here and don't put in a bill for it."

The result is Aspect Hunter School, and it took in its first pupils this year.

It is run by Autism Spectrum Australia (Aspect), Australia's largest non-profit autism service provider, and started with 13 pupils but has capacity for 60.

"The criteria for enrolments is a diagnosis of autism," the school's principal Lara Cheney told 7.30.

"We have children across the spectrum, and all our students have such individualised needs and strengths and interests."
That level of attention is labour intensive, with four staff members employed for the 13 students currently enrolled.

"We do have that higher staff-to-student ratio, which is really important in being able to achieve the outcomes that we do," Ms Cheney said.

"We are delivering the mainstream school curriculum.

"It's always working out each young person's individual needs and then how to support them to learn at their best so they reach their fullest potential."

'There's no bullying and good friendship'
Callum (right) sit at a table with classmates and an assistant teacher
PHOTO Callum (right) with classmates and a teacher's aide

ABC NEWS: JERRY RICKARD
Toni Janaly's 13-year-old son Callum was bullied and left out at the mainstream school he had attended.

"I've moved from worrying about his future to being excited about his future," she told 7.30.

"We all understand each other in our class," Callum said.

"And there's no bullying and good friendship."

When students were asked how they feel about their new school, the replies were all positive.

"Paradise", "awesome" and "perfect" were among the responses.

That's a stark contrast to how these students with autism felt at their previous schools, where their experiences included being bullied and expelled.

"I don't get pushed, [I'm not] being called names or being bullied," new student Lachlan said.
Why did he think that had been happening previously?

"'Cos I'm different."

'The teachers called me a monster'
Brittnie Gillmore with her mother Toni
PHOTO Brittnie Gillmore and her mother Toni are relieved to be at the new school.

ABC NEWS: JERRY RICKARD
Brittnie Gillmore, 15, went to a specialist school during her primary years, but once she reached high school age she went into a regular school.

"I got bullied a lot," she told 7.30.

And she didn't just have problems with other students.

"The teachers called me a monster and said I was too dangerous to be around," she said.
Her mother, Toni, said: "She wasn't able to regulate her emotions, and she would sometimes become physically violent towards teachers, of course, resulting in a suspension."

In the end Toni felt she had no option but to homeschool her daughter, so being accepted into the new school was a welcome alternative.

"It's such a relief for Brittnie and to see her happy and to feel included and accepted," she said.

"Her meltdowns have definitely decreased because she is so happy. She doesn't come home full of anxiety."

We want a 'truly inclusive education environment'
Nicole Rogerson of Autism Awareness Australia. Interviewed by 7.30, February 2019
PHOTO Nicole Rogerson says State government's should have planned for more students with autism.

SUPPLIED: NICOLE ROGERSON
Ms Rogerson said the concerns of the parents in the Hunter Valley are common across Australia.

"My preference, absolutely, would be to have better services in local schools so that all kids can be educated in their local community and we have a truly inclusive education environment," she said.

"That's what we really want.

"But I do understand for some families, for some kids, that's just not as easy as it sounds."

7.30 contacted each state's Education Department and NSW, Queensland, South Australia, Western Australia and the Northern Territory all acknowledged increases in the number of students with autism.

Ms Rogerson said it was beyond time for state governments to act.

"Sheer enrolment numbers show how many children at the kinder and primary level on the autism spectrum were enrolled, then add up the years and look at how many we are going to have in high schools," she said.

"The fact that we don't have those placements should be a shock to nobody.
"We do need these specialist units, specialist educators and we need to be real about how many kids we need to place in those, and start planning accordingly."

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