Media Watch Letters

ASAT Responds to TheBlaze.com’s “Parents set up hidden camera to monitor autistic son’s therapy sessions – what they saw happening in real-time is gut-wrenching”

Source Dear Ms. Klimas: The Association for Science in Autism Treatment applauds you for reporting on such a sensitive topic, and for bringing a potentially serious issue to light: incompetent autism treatment providers. While it is important to seek out science-based treatment in autism, it is equally imperative to secure practitioners who are thoroughly trained…

ASAT Responds to Huffington Post’s “Complementary And Alternative Medicine Use Common In Children With Autism, Study Says”

Source   Dear Ms. Pearson, Thank you for your straightforward report on the findings of a recently published study in the Journal of Behavioral and Developmental Pediatrics,  indicating that the use of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) is common in families of young children with both autism and developmental disabilities (Huffington Post Online, January 11,…

ASAT Responds to DigitalJournal.com’s “Journal of Communication Disorders Releases First Autism Study of the Son-Rise Program®”

Source   Dear Editor: We read with interest your recent press release titled, “Journal of Communication Disorders Releases First Autism Study of the Son-Rise Program® .” The very fact that this is the first study examining the benefit of a program that has been touted as an amazing and highly successful treatment for the past…

ASAT Responds to Forbes.com’s “Court Rulings Don’t Confirm Autism-Vaccine Link”

Source   Dear Ms. Willingham: All too often, both mainstream and non-mainstream media sources report stories that continue to promote a connection between vaccines and autism, referring to it as “controversy” or “debate.” Most recently, a lesser-known media outlet, the Whiteout Press, ran the headline, “Courts confirm vaccines cause autism,” which went viral on the…

ASAT Responds to AutismDailyNewscast.com’s “Limitations Apparent in Applied Behavior Analysis Research”

Source   Dear Ms. Meydam: On behalf of the Association for Science in Autism Treatment, we wish to provide feedback to your recent article entitled Limitations Apparent in Applied Behavior Analysis Research (https://autismdailynewscast.com/limitations-apparent-in-applied-behavior-analysis-research/, November 9, 2013). Applied behavior analysis (ABA) is a science that is used to promote the quality of life of individuals experiencing a…