Summary
NIH-funded brain research has been instrumental in proving that autism is a neurological condition, reducing skepticism and helping to replace harmful misunderstandings with scientific facts. This research has led to better support for autistic people in education, employment, healthcare, and the legal system, preventing mistreatment and improving lives. Cutting NIH funding would erase decades of progress, endanger vulnerable populations, and waste invaluable scientific contributions that have transformed autism care and advocacy.
We have taught about the medical diagnosis of autism for almost 25 years. Before the National Institutes of Health (NIH) funded brain research, teaching felt like simply trying to convince people, without evidence, that behavior and communication were different because an autistic person’s brain and body made them that way. People still walked away skeptical. Teachers still blamed parenting. Folks said it was vaccines. Giving talks felt weak and at times pointless when too many people had closed minds.
Pictures Speak 1,000 Words
The number of skeptics leaving our classes dramatically reduced once NIH-funded brain imaging and other studies showed the medical facts. Autistic brains are wired differently. Some parts – like the piece that controls facial muscles being really small in many – are very different than average. Teaching with images finally showed how and why autistic people needed to do the various things others found hard to understand. Science helped us stop much of the punishment, torment, and abuse heaped on children and adults who moved, talked, and behaved in ways others found confusing or unacceptable.
The NIH helps parents, other caregivers, and supporters learn to adapt their ways to better nurture and accept the people they love, care for, and support. It helps employers tap talents while giving reasonable accommodations to let people flourish while building corporate revenues. And research helps law enforcement make better decisions on a 911 call response, and judges to better understand when someone makes a disability-based error or simply is doing “autistic things” lacking criminal intent, which triggered a stranger’s 911 call.
We cannot stand by and watch the erasure of science that’s been truly lifesaving. Dumbing down society by cancelling scientific fact finding is unacceptable. We cannot count the emails and phone calls traded with our very good research friends at the University of Pittsburgh’s Center for Excellence in Autism Research, or with other generous NIH scientists nationwide who help us translate things like highly technical functional MRI science to the literally thousands of people we have reached. It has mattered a great deal. Words cannot express how much.
The Importance of Autism Research
The Autism Connection of Pennsylvania does not rely one bit on NIH funding to exist. However, our population’s survival relies on the gifts NIH science has provided in terms of our own understanding, and our ability to show others the right way to treat people. This has been critical in preventing or resolving the most dangerous situations: when people explore without fear (“wanderers,”) or are victims of neglect and abuse, or are accused of crimes and fall into the criminal legal system and prison. Homeless people, those without adequate food, people left alone in the world after their parents die, children bullied, adults fired due to basic misunderstandings, people with epilepsy or other common coexisting disorders, children and adults needed psychiatric care and medications – the things we commonly deal with every single day to the tune of about 260 help requests a month – all have been helped by our understanding how people internally process information, or how they cannot and need external help.
Please do anything you can to save NIH funding. Destroying decades of successful work by extremely smart and incredibly kind research friends is criminal and a huge talent loss, not to mention a tremendous waste of dollars invested for all the right reasons, with critically valuable outcomes to date. The future is in our hands – and we must fight to preserve it for the autism community.
Randi Marshak February 15, 2025
Pitt should join the lawsuit against NIH funding cuts
Donna Wolf Moore February 17, 2025
More research needed in this article as to how NIH actually does use and distributes its funding …maybe, NIH might help in some areas but our unbiased and impartial independent research, we have found many concerned citizens are angered by most research areas of NIH. MORE Harm than good has been discovered plus they waste more money than what they actual do to help people at large. Much of our taxpayers dollars in NIH evidently are secretively spent in millions of dollars of worthless and horrendous experimentation that cause anguish, not only to humans but to the animals they keep in their cages…Please don’t take my word for it; do your own independent research into NIH yourselves.
I and many many others, even those in the medical field, agree that it is time to stop the governmental funding of NIH and abolish its secretive and unlimited powers and hold those in NIH accountable. (Thank you for hearing the other side)
Pitt Study Participant February 18, 2025
Donna,
I have first-hand experience with the excellent studies the University of Pittsburgh’s Center for Excellence in Autism Research has done over the past 13 years. Both of my children participated in the Pitt Early Autism Sibling Study, and I have participated in two studies, both using fMRI — the most recent study is on managing emotions and sensory overstimulation to combat sucicidal ideation. This is critical research that can help people from early childhood through adulthood.