A message from Cure
Autism Now co-founder
Jonathan Shestack:
“The autism
community is
wired,
networked and
organized like
never before.
Many of our
children have
no voice, but
we can speak
on their
behalf.
Please help us
send this
message to
President Bush
and Senator
Kerry.”
To
the families and friends
of people with autism:
It
doesn’t matter if the
autistic person you care
about is three or 30,
can’t say a word or
can’t stop talking about
the train schedule.
Making sure they get
what they need, that the
world is not cruel, that
they get a chance at
fulfillment and
productivity is a
full-time job. You are
busy. We get it. We
are too.
That is why we only come
to you when we really
think it matters. We
came to you to help pass
the Children’s Health
Act of 2000, you rallied
around the cause, and
the legislation was
passed in record time.
We think it really
counts this time, too.
We are facing an
extraordinary crisis
that calls for
extraordinary action.
The
numbers of people
affected by autism keep
rising and rising. It
is getting worse, not
better. Autism is
causing more heartbreak,
not less and it is
costing more and more
money. And yet the
federal research
commitment – which was
never sufficient to
begin with – is now
dangerously failing to
keep pace with the
problem.
In
fact, autism research is
at the risk of becoming
less funded over the
next few years.
The
federal government is
currently spending about
$50 million dollars a
year on a problem that
costs the nation closer
to $50 billion in direct
costs and lost wages –
yes,
BILLION.
Over the next 15 years,
a million more people
with autism will grow
up. Their parents will
become older and less
able to care for them.
The responsibility for
these people will fall
on the system. The
system will crash. Even
if you don’t have a
child with autism, this
should make you take
notice.
If you are responsible
for leading the greatest
and wealthiest nation on
earth, you really better
pay attention.
We
know that it doesn’t
matter if you are rich
or poor; black or white;
Democrat or Republican.
You cannot run from
autism. You cannot hide
from it. There is no
pill or prayer to
protect your children or
your neighbor’s children
from autism. The only
way to avoid autism is
to fix it. The way to
fix it is through
medical research.
Last year, scientists
sponsored by the
National Institutes of
Health (NIH) wrote a
roadmap for autism
http://www.nimh.nih.gov/autismiacc/CongApprCommRep.pdf
It was an ambitious,
sometimes brilliant
document. It was a
step-by-step plan to
find treatments,
preventions and for some
even a cure for autism
in ten years time.
But then the NIH failed
to commit a single extra
dollar to making that
plan a reality