Minority students widely underidentified as Autistic

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ASPartOfMe
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05 May 2018, 3:03 am

Minority students widely underrepresented in autism identification, study shows

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In education circles, it is widely accepted that minorities are overrepresented in special education. New research from the University of Kansas has found, in terms of autism, minorities are widely underrepresented in special education. The underrepresentation varies widely from state to state and shows that students from all backgrounds are not being identified accurately, resulting in many students, especially those from minority backgrounds, not receiving services that are crucial to their education.

Jason Travers, associate professor of special education at KU, led a study that analyzed autism identification rates for every state. Travers then compared the percentage of minority students with autism to the percentage of white students with autism in each state and compared rates for each group to the rate for white students with autism in California. The analyses looked at data from 2014, which was three years after federal regulations changed from five racial categories to seven. It was also the most current year for data analyzed by the Centers for Disease Control on the prevalence of autism. Travers' research had previously shown underrepresentation of minorities in autism, but the change warranted a renewed look.

"A considerable change in demographic reporting happened at the federal all the way down to the local level," Travers said. "So individual schools had to change their reports and send them to the state, who then sent them to the federal government. So, for several years we've had an incomplete picture of autism identification rates."

The change allowed schools to report students, including those with autism, as belonging to "two or more races" for the first time, and also established two separate categories for Pacific Islander and Asian students who previously were reported as one group. The report, co-authored with Michael Krezmien of the University of Massachusetts-Amherst, was published in the journal Exceptional Children.

The data showed dramatic underrepresentation of minority students with autism in the majority of states, especially for African-American and Hispanic students. Forty states underidentified African-American students with autism when compared to white students in the same state, and 43 states underidentified Hispanic students. When the rate for each minority was compared to the rate for white students with autism in California, the data showed nearly every state underidentified minority students with autism.

Not one state had higher percentages of students from those minority groups identified at higher rates than whites, and no state had African-American or Hispanic students listed at the same percentage of white students with autism in California.

"We suspected that, although the U.S. has a similar amount of Hispanic and African-American people, children with autism in both groups would be underrepresented compared to white students. We also didn't know what the rates would be for students identified as being two or more races, Pacific Islander and Asian students due to these being new federal reporting categories," Travers said.

California was used as a comparison for the other states as it is both the largest state by population and widely considered to have outstanding infrastructure for identifying and serving students with autism. The identification rate in California also was similar to the prevalence rate recently reported by the CDC. As the largest state, it is also the state least vulnerable to statistical fluctuation in data, Travers said.

While underrepresentation of minority students with autism was common, there was wide variance from state to state. For example, in Kansas, African-American students were overrepresented. Iowa was the only other state where that was also the case. No states overidentified Hispanic students, and 42 states underidentified them.

The findings counter the prevailing notion in special education that minority students are overrepresented in special education because the system is being used as a tool of oppression. Instead, it could mean school officials are not identifying minority students with autism due to longstanding concerns about placing too many minority students in special education, at least in terms of autism, Travers said. Worse yet, the problem appears to be nationwide. If the data showed underrepresentation in only a few states or in one geographic region it could reasonably be explained as caused by that states' policies or regional factors. Instead, Travers said, the findings suggest inaccurate autism identification is a more important problem than overrepresentation in special education, and that more must be done to ensure equitable access to specialized treatment.

White students and families traditionally have more access to autism diagnoses and interventions, which can be expensive, Travers said. However, he doesn't believe white students are overrepresented in the autism category. Instead, Travers suspects well-intentioned school leaders may be inadvertently denying minority students an autism eligibility due to concerns about exacerbating the widely perceived problem of minority overrepresentation. Travers hopes to study whether students are being accurately identified within their states in future research. He also hopes to determine if certain factors can more accurately predict autism identification by using a more sophisticated analysis of regional, school district, school and student-level factors.


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Kraichgauer
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06 May 2018, 12:56 am

Of that I have no doubt.


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06 May 2018, 2:08 am

^same


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LoveNotHate
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06 May 2018, 3:18 am

I don't think public schools provide much "autism services".

Like, is there any public school in America with an ASD program that has dimly light classrooms? Probably not.

Likely, if an ASD parent seeks help, the only help provided is to lump the kid in with all other "special ed", and no specialized ASD service/help is provided. So, this, combined with the reality that "special ed" might be stigmatizing for the kid, may dissuade parents from doing this.


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Tawaki
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06 May 2018, 7:12 am

Welp...

1. The teachers and parents have to request something be done. If I'm a teacher with 34 kindergarteners, it's all damage control. I'm not worrying about anything until the room gets on fire or someone gets *I need an ER visit hurt* Worrying why my student isn't playing nice compared to getting everyone to read or learn math isn't priority.

2. How much of this is cultural? Maybe white parents are more accepting of diagnosis that will never go way (talking about Aspergers which some kids will be able to pass as quirky)? If I'm a person of color do I also want to saddle my kid with an autism diagnosis? What's the upside of with a school that has marginal services and I have no money for insurance/extra therapies out side of the school system?

I think the big chunk comes down to money and time. A white upper middle class family has both. They can find outside services that either a) take their insurance or b) private pay. They have jobs that have family medical leave or personal days to schedule speech therapy, ABA, or whatever multiple times a month. They may have a boss who doesn't give them s**t when they want to come to IEP meetings during business working hours.

If I'm a single mom living in Detroit, I maybe working two jobs that pay minimum wage. Most providers don't take Medicaid, so I may be waiting over a year to see anyone. The school district has no funds except to handle the worse of the worse special education kids. I don't have the time or resources to know what is offered in my community. The school may not know either.

Autism is an affluent disease. If you are in dumpster fire inner city school, at best you may get a 504 plan for some behavioral issue. Noone is going to dig too deep, because there is no money to help anyway. How much is cultural bias?

This is a water is wet study. Hope they dig deeper to find out the why.



leahbear
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06 May 2018, 12:03 pm

I know in Canada they still use any excuse to take minority children away from their families and communities and place them in foster care with white families. Issues like this might make minorities less likely to believe that any good will come out of getting their kids diagnosed. How can they trust the system?