T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1441.1 | speaking of cause and effect... | CSSE::NEILSEN | Wally Neilsen-Steinhardt | Tue May 14 1991 13:55 | 20 |
| .0>In both cases the cause of the deficiency is Fetal Alcohol Syndrome - the
>mother ingested lots of alcohol at critical times in the fetal development,
This strikes me as an interesting hyopthesis which needs more confirmation
than supplied here.
How reliably can this condition be diagnosed?
How many cases have been found?
In how many cases could excessive fetal alcohol exposure be proved?
What else did these cases have in common?
How many instances of excessive fetal alcohol exposure occur every year?
How many such exposures lead to the condition?
Do the results above meet the usual tests for statistical significance of
associations?
|
1441.2 | More data | CIVAGE::LYNN | Lynn Yarbrough @WNP DTN 427-5663 | Wed May 15 1991 16:55 | 44 |
| >This strikes me as an interesting hyopthesis which needs more confirmation
>than supplied here.
I contacted Dr. Mary Dufore of the NIH Drug & Alcohol dept. and posed these
questions to her.
>How reliably can this condition be diagnosed?
Someone with experience can pick them out right away. There are distinctive
physical characteristics in the face, etc. that can be easily seen.
>How many cases have been found?
About 2/1000 in the general population - about 10,000 new cases each year.
Density varies with locale, cultural patterns. Numbers are hard to pin down
because there are a lot of 80 IQ's who manage to survive in our society.
>In how many cases could excessive fetal alcohol exposure be proved?
In all cases in which the syndrome is positively confirmed, the mother
admits to drinking at some time during pregnancy.
>What else did these cases have in common?
FAS'ers usually have short stature, crowded teeth, missing dimple between
nose and upper lip, etc. Post-mortem examination of infants with FAS show
that the brain is profoundly different from normal brains.
>How many instances of excessive fetal alcohol exposure occur every year?
Cases - About 10,000/year. Exposure? Somewhat higher.
>How many such exposures lead to the condition?
The fetus is affected by alcohol much more severely than the mother - it
can't metabolize it - and brain damage can occur at ANY time during the
pregnancy, especially during the couple of weeks before the pregnancy is
apparent, when the fetal brain is already being developed. Fetuses develop
much higher blood alcohol levels than their mothers.
>Do the results above meet the usual tests for statistical significance of
>associations?
The doctors seem to think so.
|
1441.3 | | CLT::TRACE::GILBERT | Ownership Obligates | Thu May 16 1991 10:33 | 6 |
| > Numbers are hard to pin down
> because there are a lot of 80 IQ's who manage to survive in our society.
"Dr.Smith, could you give us a figure for the incidence of FAS?"
"Uh, sorry, no. My IQ is only 80, and I just barely manage in our society."
|
1441.4 | wrong occupation for this hazard | CIVAGE::LYNN | Lynn Yarbrough @WNP DTN 427-5663 | Tue Jun 11 1991 13:30 | 1 |
| No, no - not doctors, *politicians*. :-)
|
1441.5 | Worse than FAS? | AGOUTL::BELDIN | Pull us together, not apart | Fri Jun 14 1991 17:27 | 31 |
| FAS may cause congenital mathematical incompetence, but bad teaching
causes mathephobia which is a great waste.
Here in Puerto Rico, we have more exaggerated rates of mathephobia than
in the states, and by considerable anecdotal evidence, I am convinced
that destructive teaching is at the heart of it.
1) My wife can't do fractions. She explains it as due to two causes, a
teacher who used the cane as his negative reinforcement for those who
didn't get the right answer and being passed into the sixth grade from
the fourth for reasons of verbal skills. Fifth grade was where
fractions were taught.
2) I have had numerous students at the university who tell similar
stories which convince me that my wife's situation was not unique.
3) No high school mathematics is required either for graduation from
high school or entry into college here. Only after one enters the
university, does s/he learn that pre-calculus is a graduation
requirement of the college. 85% are flunking that course according to
a former colleague, but the failure rate is *only* 10% among those who
took high school math.
4) The Department of Education has no requirements for mathematical
preparation of teachers who are assigned to teach math in elementary or
secondary school. I have met teachers who suffer from mathephobia and
are currently engaged in transmitting it to another generation.
Disheartening, isn't it,
Dick
|
1441.6 | Pixie people | CIVAGE::LYNN | Lynn Yarbrough @WNP DTN 427-5663 | Mon Feb 10 1992 13:20 | 8 |
| Discover Magazine, June '91 issue, has an article by Robert Finn titled
"Different Minds". It focusses on people with Williams' ("Pixie-face")
syndrome, a class of birth defects that, like FAS, produce people with
normal-to-above average verbal skills and the inability to count. Williams'
syndrome is superficially comparable to Downe's syndrome, but actually
quite different, according to the author. People with this syndrome usually
never enter society as independent individuals because of their inability
to derive consequences from actions.
|