Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

proverbialwisdom

(4,959 posts)
Tue Jan 26, 2016, 10:07 PM Jan 2016

BBC Magazine - Donald Grey Triplett: The first boy diagnosed as autistic

http://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-35350880

Donald Grey Triplett: The first boy diagnosed as autistic
21 January 2016


Donald Grey Triplett was the first person to be diagnosed with autism. The fulfilling life he has led offers an important lesson for today, John Donvan and Caren Zucker write.

After Rain Man, and The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time, the next great autism portrayal the stage or screen might want to consider taking on is the life of one Donald Grey Triplett, an 82-year-old man living today in a small town in the southern United States, who was there at the very beginning, when the story of autism began.

The scholarly paper which first put autism on the map as a recognisable diagnosis listed Donald as "Case 1" among 11 children who - studied by Baltimore psychiatrist Leo Kanner - crystallised for him the idea that he was seeing a kind of disorder not previously listed in the medical textbooks. He called it "infantile autism", which was later shortened to just autism.

Born in 1933 in Forest, Mississippi, to Beamon and Mary Triplett, a lawyer and a school teacher, Donald was a profoundly withdrawn child, who never met his mother's smile, or answered to her voice, but appeared at all times tuned into a separate world with its own logic, and its own way of using the English language.

Donald could speak and mimic words, but the mimicry appeared to overtake meaning. Most often, he merely echoed what he had heard someone else say. For a time, for example, he went about pronouncing the words "trumpet vine" and "chrysanthemum" over and over, as well as the phrase: "I could put a little comma."

<>

But his intellectual gifts did not save him from being put in an institution. It was the doctors' order. It was always that way, in that era, for children who strayed as far from "normal" as Donald did. The routine prescription for parents was to try to forget the child, and move forward with their lives. In mid-1937, Beamon and Mary complied with the order. Donald, three years old, was sent away. But they did not forget him. They visited monthly, probably debating each time they began the long drive home to Forest whether they should just take him back with them after one of these visits.

<>

In late 1938, that is what they did. And that is when they brought him to see Dr Kanner in Baltimore. Kanner was stymied at first. He was not sure what psychiatric "box" to fit Donald into, because none of the ready-made ones seemed to fit. But after several more visits from Donald, and seeing more children with overlapping presentations in behaviour, he published his groundbreaking paper establishing the terms for a new diagnosis.

From there, the history of autism would unfold across decades, playing out in many and varied dramatic episodes, bizarre twists, and star turns, both heroic and villainous, by researchers, educators, activists and autistic people themselves. Donald, however, had no part in this. Instead, after Baltimore, he had gone back to Mississippi, where he spent the rest of his life, unremarked upon.

Well, not exactly. Donald is still alive today, healthy at 82, and a major figure in our new book. When we first tracked him down, in 2007, we were astonished to learn how his life had turned out.

He lives in his own house (the house he grew up in) within a safe community, where everyone knows him, with friends he sees regularly, a Cadillac to get around in, and a hobby he pursues daily (golf). That's when he is not enjoying his other hobby, travel. Donald, on his own, has travelled all over the United States and to a few dozen countries abroad. He has a closet full of albums packed with photos taken during his journeys.

His is the picture of the perfectly content retiree - not the life sentence in an institution which was nearly his lot - where he surely would have wilted, and never done any of those things. For that, his mother deserves enormous credit. In addition to bringing her boy home, she worked tirelessly to help him connect to the world around him, to give him language, to help him learn to take care of himself.

Something took in all this, because, by the time he was a teenager, Donald was able to attend a regular high school, and then college, where he came out with passing grades in French and mathematics.

<>

Credit for these outcomes must also go to Donald himself. It was, after all, his innate intelligence and his own capacity for learning which led to this blooming into full potential.

But we saw something else when we went to Forest - and this is where we think the movie of Donald's life would get interesting. The town itself played a part in Donald's excellent outcome - the roughly 3,000 people of Forest, Mississippi, who made a probably unconscious but clear decision in how they were going to treat this strange boy, then man, who lived among them. They decided, in short, to accept him - to count him as "one of their own" and to protect him.

<>

John Donvan and Caren Zucker are the authors of In A Different Key: The Story of Autism

More: http://www.ageofautism.com/2016/01/age-of-autism-weekly-wrap-case-1s-biomed-recovery-and-why-it-still-matters.html
2 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
BBC Magazine - Donald Grey Triplett: The first boy diagnosed as autistic (Original Post) proverbialwisdom Jan 2016 OP
This message was self-deleted by its author Odin2005 Jan 2016 #1
Related and recommended. Both may make you cry. proverbialwisdom Jan 2016 #2

Response to proverbialwisdom (Original post)

proverbialwisdom

(4,959 posts)
2. Related and recommended. Both may make you cry.
Thu Jan 28, 2016, 02:30 AM
Jan 2016
https://iacc.hhs.gov/about/member-bios.shtml#john-robison

John Elder Robison
Neurodiversity Scholar in Residence at the College of William and Mary

Mr. John Elder Robison joined the IACC as a public member in 2012. Mr. Robison is the Neurodiversity Scholar in Residence at the College of William & Mary in Williamsburg, VA. He is an autistic adult who is best known for working to increase public understanding of autism, and helping schools, businesses and government accommodate and accept people with autism. He is committed to diversity and is a strong advocate for autism science and research. He is dedicated to the goal of helping people with autism obtain an equal opportunity at success in work and social life. Mr. Robison is active on numerous ASD-related boards and committees in the US, Canada, Europe, and Australia. In addition to his service on the IACC, Mr. Robison has served on the steering committee for the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF) Autism Core Set project, and on organizing committees for the International Society for Autism Research (INSAR), panels and committees for the National Institutes of Health (NIH), and boards for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Mr. Robison's books Look Me in the Eye, Be Different, and Raising Cubby are some of the most widely read accounts of life with autism in the world. In addition to his work as an autism advocate and author, Mr. Robison has had a lifelong interest in cars. He is the founder of JE Robison Service of Springfield, Massachusetts, a business that restores Rolls-Royce, Land Rover, Jaguar, Mercedes, and BMW automobiles. Earlier Mr. Robison worked as an engineer in music and electronics. In his youth he was the American engineer for Britannia Row Audio, the sound company formed by the musical group Pink Floyd; and was the creator of the signature illuminated, fire breathing, and rocket launching special effects guitars played by KISS.

http://www.ageofautism.com/2016/01/the-autismland-that-neurodiversity-forgot.html

The AutismLand That Neurodiversity Forgot
By Kim Stagliano



FROM COMMENTS:

Posted by: John Elder Robison | January 25, 2016 at 11:42 AM

It has always been my belief that autistics who speak out for acceptance, therapy, services, have a duty to also speak out on behalf of autistics with much greater disability. You are absolutely right that we have a population who has seizures, terrible gi issues, and lots of rage and frustration that's leading to both self injurious and aggressive behavior problems.

And it's true that we have done little to remediate those things in the past decade.

The emergent concept of neurodiversity is great in its human rights, acceptance, and respect aspects. But at the same time I agree that the presence of autistic people talking unwittingly makes those who cannot talk, and who have terrible challenges, more invisible. As much as people like me say otherwise, the broad public tends to equate "we want acceptance" to "we are not disabled," even as many neurodiversity proponents stress ongoing disability and the need for supports.

Another thing that troubles me is the attempt to separate the worst complications of autism by saying "that's the epilepsy," or "that's a co morbidity, not autism" as if that renders that persons challenge not part and parcel of autism. I am always clear that we need to study and treat it all together in context. And we have to be clear - while we may love our children, and accept their epilepsy or gut troubles for now, we should certainly strive to remediate those things.

I don't think anyone asks you or anyone else to like the autism that disabled your daughters. What's asked is that your daughters have the same respect and acceptance as anyone else. One of the things I have come to see is the need for adult services and living options for severely disabled autistics, because we do not have realistic options to relieve their disability.

Some of us have gotten better with age; others have not.

It's frankly a mystery to me why GI and epilepsy issues seem so insoluble in some autistic people. It's also alarming that we are so ineffective in treating psychiatric disorders that accompany it. The fact of suicide speaks to that.

Five years ago I felt we were on the verge of real breakthroughs. Now I see what a long slog this is turning into, and it's hard to see a speedier path ahead. That is why I am pushing in IACC for greater focus on deliverable benefits for the community.

http://www.ageofautism.com/2016/01/age-of-autism-weekly-wrap-case-1s-biomed-recovery-and-why-it-still-matters.html

Weekly Wrap: Case 1’s Biomed Recovery, and Why It Still Matters
By Dan Olmsted



FROM COMMENTS:

Posted by: John Stone | January 23, 2016 at 06:58 AM

Dan

Stated with loads of good sense and dignity. The other day while considering the glaring awfulness of Donvan and Zucker (or was it Conman and Sucker?) I lighted on the Danny Kaye version of the Emperor's New Clothes - how he spells it out for his young audience. "In order not to appear a fool" everyone has to declare the very opposite of reality. A century before Ed Bernays Hans Christian Andersen already knew the score. In order not to look a fool you have to take your cue from the manipulators, even if it is quite obvious what they are doing. And in this case it is very obvious: these characters are going from mainstream media outlet to mainstream media outlet (the courtiers and the yes-men) dropping heavy hints about what to do and say.

Meanwhile, I also note the comment of Jonathan Rose in these columns the other day:

"It's wonderful that Donald Triplett grew up in small town (population 3000) where he was loved and accepted. But if the real autism rate in the 1930s was equal to what it is today (2 percent of children) there would have been 60 autistic people in this small community. And their neighbors and doctors simply overlooked 59 of them? They were just like Donald Triplett, and no one noticed them?"

So now, with thanks to Anne Dachel and the Examiner for pointiing it out, Seattle Children's Hospital say 1 in 20 children under 5 are epileptic:


http://www.seattlechildrens.org/medical-conditions/brain-nervous-system-mental-conditions/epilepsy/

Apparently, this is nothing to be concerned about. We read:

"Epilepsy in Children: Epilepsy happens more in children than it does in adults. It affects about 1% of the general population - one out of every 100 people. About 5% of children younger than 5 years old have epilepsy. That is about one in every 20 children under 5."

So, that's that then. One in 20 children under 5 have epilepsy, but they probably always did and no one noticed (Conman and Sucker can go around the studios saying that too). At least the Examiner has go it right for once: "Parents question vaccines as epilepsy rates rise to 1 in 20 children under five"


http://www.examiner.com/article/parents-question-vaccines-as-epilepsy-rates-rise-to-1-20-children-under-five

Latest Discussions»Issue Forums»Editorials & Other Articles»BBC Magazine - Donald Gre...