To the best of my knowledge (and I’ve looked) there is not a single scientific long-term randomized study showing the effectiveness of any type of treatment for autism.
Why isn’t there? There would seem to have been more than enough time & funding for at least one. Is there some more subtle problem here?
(I’m thinking a scenario like “parents of autistic kids are constantly trying new approaches both quack and genuine, and would refuse to stop this, thereby making the results worthless; and this is foreseeable in advance by any would-be experimenters.”)
That raises the question—did that opening sentence of the head reply mean ‘showing the effectiveness or ineffectiveness of any method’, or ‘showing a method to be effective’?
Why isn’t there? There would seem to have been more than enough time & funding for at least one. Is there some more subtle problem here?
(I’m thinking a scenario like “parents of autistic kids are constantly trying new approaches both quack and genuine, and would refuse to stop this, thereby making the results worthless; and this is foreseeable in advance by any would-be experimenters.”)
No one wants to be in the control group.
Do you know that, or are you guessing?
Because there’s no cure?
But there could still be studies demonstrating that some treatments had no effect.
That raises the question—did that opening sentence of the head reply mean ‘showing the effectiveness or ineffectiveness of any method’, or ‘showing a method to be effective’?
I meant to imply “effectiveness or ineffectiveness”
Thanks