Subscribe now

Letter: The autism industry

Published 28 September 2005

From Michael Baron

I am provoked by the timely article on autism (13 August, p 36) to repeat what I wrote some years ago in a letter you published (7 April 2001, p 53). I said then that autism expands with the number of people making a living from this neurological condition – researchers, statisticians, doctors, teachers, journalists, TV and film-makers, novelists, poets, alternative-medicine charlatans, administrators, staff of charities and private-healthcare providers.

The widened parameters of diagnosis of the disease to engulf larger and larger numbers of people have enabled Simon Baron-Cohen to reveal recently, “At least 40 people with Asperger syndrome are studying at Cambridge University today.” When I was there, 55 years ago, I am fairly sure the number was about the same. They were just eccentric chaps, that’s all.

Loweswater, Cumbria, UK

Issue no. 2519 published 1 October 2005

Sign up to our weekly newsletter

Receive a weekly dose of discovery in your inbox. We'll also keep you up to date with New Scientist events and special offers.

Sign up
Piano Exit Overlay Banner Mobile Piano Exit Overlay Banner Desktop