The disappearing seasonality of autism conceptions in California

Autism incidence and prevalence have increased dramatically in the last two decades. The autism caseload in California increased 600% between 1992 and 2006, yet there is little consensus as to the cause. Studying the seasonality of conceptions of children later diagnosed with autism may yield clues...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2012-07, Vol.7 (7), p.e41265-e41265
Hauptverfasser: Mazumdar, Soumya, Liu, Ka-Yuet, Susser, Ezra, Bearman, Peter
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Liu, Ka-Yuet
Susser, Ezra
Bearman, Peter
description Autism incidence and prevalence have increased dramatically in the last two decades. The autism caseload in California increased 600% between 1992 and 2006, yet there is little consensus as to the cause. Studying the seasonality of conceptions of children later diagnosed with autism may yield clues to potential etiological drivers. To assess if the conceptions of children later diagnosed with autism cluster temporally in a systematic manner and whether any pattern of temporal clustering persists over time. We searched for seasonality in conceptions of children later diagnosed with autism by applying a one-dimensional scan statistic with adaptive temporal windows on case and control population data from California for 1992 through 2000. We tested for potential confounding effects from known risk factors using logistic regression models. There is a consistent but decreasing seasonal pattern in the risk of conceiving a child later diagnosed with autism in November for the first half of the study period. Temporal clustering of autism conceptions is not an artifact of composition with respect to known risk factors for autism such as socio-economic status. There is some evidence of seasonality in the risk of conceiving a child later diagnosed with autism. Searches for environmental factors related to autism should allow for the possibility of risk factors or etiological drivers that are seasonally patterned and that appear and remain salient for a discrete number of years.
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Temporal clustering of autism conceptions is not an artifact of composition with respect to known risk factors for autism such as socio-economic status. There is some evidence of seasonality in the risk of conceiving a child later diagnosed with autism. Searches for environmental factors related to autism should allow for the possibility of risk factors or etiological drivers that are seasonally patterned and that appear and remain salient for a discrete number of years.</abstract><cop>United States</cop><pub>Public Library of Science</pub><pmid>22859972</pmid><doi>10.1371/journal.pone.0041265</doi><tpages>e41265</tpages><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record>
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subjects Adaptive control
Annual variations
Archives & records
Autism
Autistic Disorder - epidemiology
Autistic Disorder - etiology
Births
California - epidemiology
Children
Cluster Analysis
Clustering
Datasets
Environmental factors
Etiology
Female
Health aspects
Humans
Hypotheses
Influenza
Likelihood Functions
Logistic Models
Male
Mathematics
Medicine
Models, Biological
Monte Carlo Method
Odds Ratio
Outdoor air quality
Pediatrics
Pregnancy
Premature birth
Psychiatry
Regression analysis
Regression models
Risk
Risk analysis
Risk factors
Schizophrenia
Seasonal variations
Seasons
Social and Behavioral Sciences
Social sciences
Statistical analysis
Statistics
Studies
Time series
title The disappearing seasonality of autism conceptions in California
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