Bite Back with Abbey Sharp - The Autism “Epidemic”: Why MAHAs Witch Hunt for a Cause & “Cure” is a Dangerous Fantasy with Dr. Tommy Martin
Episode Date: September 30, 2025Here’s a run down of what we discussed in today’s episode:IntroductionParenting a Child With Autism Through a Doctor’s LensWhy Autism Sparks Fear, Stigma, and ConspiraciesWhat Science Actually S...ays About Autism Risk FactorsFolate, Pregnancy, and the Push for Folinic AcidTylenol, Fevers, and the Erosion of Medical TrustVaccine Myths and the Cost of MisinformationThe Autism Witch Hunt and Public Health FearsReassurance for Parents Navigating Autism AnxietyNeurodivergence and Its SuperpowersSupporting Brilliant Neurodivergent MindsCheck in with today’s amazing guest: Instagram: @dr.tommymartinTiktok: @dr.tommymartinYoutube: @dr.tommymartinReferences:Maternal Plasma Folate, Vitamin B12 Levels and Multivitamin Supplement during Pregnancy and Risk of Autism Spectrum Disorders in the Boston Birth CohortDisclaimer: The content in this episode is for educational and entertainment purposes only and is never a substitute for medical advice. If you’re struggling with with your mental or physical health, please work one on one with a health care provider.If you have heard yourself in our discussion today, and are looking for support, contact the free NEDIC helpline at 1-866-NEDIC-20 or go to eatingdisorderhope.com. 🥤 Check out my 2-in-1 Plant Based Probiotic Protein Powder, neue theory at www.neuetheory.com or @neuetheory and use my promo code BITEBACK20 to get 20% off your order! Don’t forget to Please subscribe on Apple, Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts and leave us a review! It really helps us out. ✉️ SUBSCRIBE TO MY NEWSLETTERS ⤵️Neue Theory newsletterAbbey's Kitchen newsletter 🥞 FREE HUNGER CRUSHING COMBO™ E-BOOK! 💪🏼 FREE PROTEIN 101 E-BOOK! 📱 Follow me! Instagram: @abbeyskitchenTikTok: @abbeyskitchenYouTube: @AbbeysKitchen My blog, Abbey’s Kitchen www.abbeyskitchen.comMy book, The Mindful Glow Cookbook affiliate link: https://amzn.to/3NoHtvf If you liked this podcast, please like, follow, and leave a review with your thoughts and let me know who you want me to discuss next!
Transcript
Discussion (0)
you took this and it caused this in your child, and therefore, like, you shouldn't have done that.
And I just don't think that's fair.
For all the parents out there, if your child has autism, there's nothing that you did that led to that.
Welcome to another episode of Bite Back with Abby Sharp, where I dismantle die culture rules, call out the charlatans spinning the pseudoscience, and help you achieve food freedom.
for good.
Today we're going to be tackling a subject that is often clouded by fear, myths, and
finger-pointing, autism in children.
And my guest today is no stranger to the quote controversy.
Dr. Tommy Martin is a science communicator, pediatrician, and father to a son with autism,
bringing both professional expertise and personal experience to this very important
conversation. Together we will unpack how America is approaching autism right now. The role of
misinformation, the scapegoating of vaccines despite very clear and powerful research that they do not
cause autism, and the real impact of fear-based narratives on families and children, those who are both
neurodivergent and not. Now, reminder that today's episode will be touching on some more sensitive
and unfortunately politically adjacent themes.
We do our absolute best not to get into politics on this podcast,
but to talk about autism in 2025, we unfortunately do need to talk about Maha activities.
But I just want to reiterate here that this is not meant to demonize
or celebrate one political party over the other.
I'm just trying to stick to the implications for public health
because that is truly all I'm qualified to speak to as a Canadian.
Never mind a dietitian.
And I just hope that it's interpreted as going no further than that.
But very quickly, if you are new here, it would mean so much to me
if you would please hit that subscribe button wherever you're getting your podcasts.
And maybe leave me a little comment if you are loving these episodes.
All of your support means so much to me in helping to grow this podcast.
All right, friends, let's get to it.
Hello, Tommy. Thank you so much for joining me.
Abby, it is truly an honor and pleasure.
I've been following your content for years, so it's so awesome to be able to connect here on your podcast.
I love that.
Thank you.
You as well.
Now, before we dive into some kind of bigger societal issues, can you kind of share a little bit
about your own journey, you know, both as a pediatrician and as a pediatrician?
and as a parent kind of navigating this world of autism?
First of all, any diagnosis that your child gets, it's hard.
And as a parent, what feels like you have a very normally developing child,
then for some reason all of a sudden is becoming delayed and not appearing like their peers.
And so that kind of leads me, I could talk about how we actually get Oliver's diagnosis.
you know so he ended up having speech delay and then just some of his interactions with his peers
were not typical and so he would um i can give some examples but ultimately my wife and i
even being pediatricians we didn't really know if he had autism or not but there were some signs
there like speech delay abnormal social interactions but he was extremely social like you go on a plane
he wants to say hi to every single person on a plane right but that's not necessarily
socially appropriate. And even when he was getting older, not realizing that I think was one of the
things. And so when he saw a developmental pediatrician, they were like, ah, we believe that he has
autism. And so ultimately, again, I think some of the reason why it's such a touch point, one is
any diagnosis is hard. And something that I would always tell parents is that diagnosis does not
define your child's potential. Even if they have whatever diagnosis it may be with earlier
dimensions with resources, you could still help them reach their fullest potential and do not let
societal stigmas deter you from helping them achieve that. Now, you know, when it comes to autism,
we've seen this resurgence of this fear-driven rhetoric, largely amplified by, you know,
RFK juniors, all these inflammatory statements and other dominant voices within the Maha movement.
What do you feel it is about autism specifically that just makes it such a
flashpoint for like fear and stigma and conspiracy theories because autism is generally diagnosed
anywhere from like around 18 months to even you know two and a half years old sometimes earlier
sometimes later um what happens is a child that is developing between the age of birth and one
it's kind of hard to catch some of the delays especially speech delay and social interactions
being some of the key diagnostic criteria for autism people believe their child
is completely developing completely normal, and it does appear like that. But once they reach
the milestones, once they get 18 months, two years of age, those social interactions and the
speech really becomes more apparent. And it just so happens that vaccines happening between
four months, six months, nine months, 12 months going on throughout all of development is when we start
seeing some of those milestones. So it makes a very easy picture to link those associations,
even though with the research that we have, we know it's not true.
And so I think that's another really hard thing as well.
And then when you have people that are in positions of power feed into that rhetoric
and feed into those fear-mongering tactics when they know that they could make loose associations
make it seem more credible.
And I think all of those make it extremely, extremely hard.
Once you throw politics into it, it just creates a whole mess of things.
Totally.
I could not agree more.
And, you know, I think also because autism is not just like one thing, right?
It's a spectrum.
And I think that variability makes it very hard for people to understand clearly and also just
so easy for misinformation to spread because there is such a wide range of presentations when it
comes to autism.
For sure.
I'm so glad you brought that up, especially because that's like one of the key things that
people are kind of like anchoring on now is like, well, if you look in the 1960s,
to today, autism rates have skyrocketed.
You know, and that is, that's true, right?
Like, if you look at just the rates and look at absolutely nothing else, that is true.
But you have to look into everything else.
And so some of those things would be our diagnostic criteria, it catches a lot more
children.
Not only that awareness from not only pediatricians, but parents, the general public,
and knowing what to look for also has skyrocketed increased as well.
The other thing is, before the new diagnostic,
criteria, there used to be a lot of different diagnoses that are now all lumped into this autism
spectrum disorder, which you were talking about. And so when you have a very large range of things
that all fall under autism, what used to maybe be 10 cases, because there was like a thousand
other diagnostic codes or labels, now they're all into one. You put all of those into one bucket.
It's going to appear that rates have skyrocketed. That is such a good point. And speaking of just
kind of misinformation and misunderstanding. You know, the health secretary has promised that or had
promised he was going to find the kind of quote unquote true cause of autism by September. And well,
I mean, when we're recording this, I don't know when this is going to go out, but we're well into
September. And we're going to talk about some of the ideas about the cause of autism in more
detail in a moment. But, you know, what is the scientific consensus on the cause or I guess more
accurately, just like the risk factors for your child having autism.
Yeah, so we'd say like we know some things like cause autism or lead to autism and
then there's some risk factors. And so just a couple of things. One would be that we know
through research and as science evolves more that we know that genetics play a very, very large
part in autism. And so we know that there are genetic factors. And I think I think in 15, 20 years,
we may know even more in depth and specific about the genetic causes of autism.
But we know through sibling studies that genetics plays a very, very large part in it.
The second is different environmental factors.
We know as well cause it.
And so some of those could be things with maternal relations or even other environmental factors,
I'd say, aren't as causative, but there may be links.
And I think some of those things are what makes it easy.
to create misinformation around as well.
Yeah, no, exactly.
Neuridvergence is thought to be 70% genetic.
And again, I think parents don't want to,
don't like acknowledging that
because then they almost feel like,
oh, it's their fault.
But of course, your genes are never your fault.
And there's, you know, over 100 genes
that have been linked to autism traits
that interact to, you know, to determine where
or if someone lands on the spectrum.
And then, you know, other things like advanced,
paternal age or complications during pregnancy and delivery, maybe some medications, not vaccines,
we'll get to that in a moment, but, you know, those may interact with those who are genetically
predisposed.
It's multifactorial.
It's not just like one thing happens and then bam, your kid, you know, catches autism.
As it seems to, it seems like that's the general narrative that we see right now.
Yeah, and I love how you said that how that we know that there's a genetic component,
And then if someone is predisposed because of that genetic component, then environmental factors could, you know, I guess increase the likelihood of them developing or having autism.
And I think we see that.
And something else that I think is really hard for parents is there's no one else with autism in my family, right?
And so how are you saying it's genetic if no one else in my family has autism?
Well, and the reason being is just because that our son has my genes, my wife's genes, that it doesn't mean that his genes.
aren't still different. So I do not have Lamb Schaefer syndrome. My wife does not have
Lambshafer syndrome. We did genetic testing and neither of us have it or even have the gene
defect that would lead to it, but yet our son has it. And we know that Lamb Schaefer syndrome is
genetic, right? And so just even with his two diagnoses in general, you could kind of see just because
we say it's genetic doesn't mean that it has to come from the parent's genes somehow.
Right. Yeah, that's a really good reminder. Now, I
I want to talk a little bit about some of these kind of, quote, quote, causes.
You know, there's a big Times article that alleged that RFK Jr. may blame Tylenol and folate deficiency in pregnancy for autism.
And if I can just kind of speak to the latter for a moment, you know, we do have some evidence that very low and very high levels of folate in pregnancy may alter neurodevelopment.
So, for example, some studies have shown that supplementing with folate.
folic acid has been associated with a 23% reduced risk of autism, but then having super high plasma levels like four times what is normal is associated with twice the risk of a child having autism.
But again, most of these studies are very small and they only look at one measurement once and the findings are super duper mixed.
But still, you know, this has led to an interest in giving a form of folate called philinic acid to children with autism.
What are your thoughts on the idea of this kind of becoming just like a universal recommendation
for kids?
Yeah, I don't think that the broad evidence would support it, especially so a lot of the
thought processes that parents want to give it because they're promised that the felonic acid
will improve the symptoms of autism.
And then you have some parents that anecdotally say, when I started giving philinic acid,
they completely got better.
And then you'll have other parents to say, nothing happened at all.
And so I think some of that plays into, when you look at anecdotal data, you have to say,
what else is going on during these times when we're giving the medications, some of which could be the child's getting older and more mature and some of those behaviors are going away.
Or maybe there was a stressor at school that now has disappeared, or there's literally so many factors that can play into a child's behavior getting better or worse, that anecdotal data doesn't really help us entirely, although I think it's still important to keep in mind.
I think when we look at the more broad data, we see that it doesn't necessarily have an effect or an improvement on behavior.
Now, if we did have a large study that showed that and solidified, like, hey, look at this.
Like, we've tried this.
We've tested it.
And it does see that it improves behaviors, which I think you'd have to come up with some sort of scale of like, how are we going to measure the behaviors that is standardized across children with autism?
And then also discussing the confounding factors of like the age that it's given and are they in school or are they out of school and like all those things.
So ultimately, I just say that the data does not necessarily support that.
And so I would not be recommending it to parents.
And I think also you have to like everyone's always talking about big pharma.
But to recommend a supplement that's not proven to help kind of seems like your people are playing into the hands of a big wellness or big supplement.
And so I just wouldn't go down that road quite yet until we have a lot more data supporting
it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, when we look at the research, like there's some very small studies, they found that like high
dose folinic acid given to kids with autism who also test positive for having, we call
FRAAs or folate receptor auto-antibodies may help with things like language, communication skills,
other core ASD symptoms.
this is like not a universal treatment and and so the effects are far less consistent with
kiddos who don't also have this FRAAs and like like everything's a risk benefit because
yeah you see some studies may so show some kind of benefit for some kiddos but there's
also case studies and studies case reports and studies that have showed increased hyperactivity
right and irritability and aggression and sleep disturbances um plus you know like the
there is concern about seizure control because folate metabolism interacts with neurotransmitters
and it can also mask B12 deficiency. So I, like you, like I don't want parents to hear this
and then go, oh, if my child has autism, I'm going to start megadosing with folate without
that careful supervision. We don't have the data to know what is the appropriate dosage,
is it going to, you know, how do we manage the risk-benefit analysis, all that. So, yeah.
We have to be very cautious with the kind of interventions we jump on.
Yeah, I agree with that completely.
I'd say like if parents are like at their what's in and they're like, look, we've tried
everything.
We don't know what to do.
We just are so tired and we have to try something.
Then I'd say talk to your pediatrician about that.
So that if you are going to try something, even if it may not be recommended, that your
pediatrician can guide you and say, like, look, I'm not recommending this.
But if you're going to do this anyway, let's try to do it as safely as possible.
you know and so i think talking to your pediatrician about those things and it's completely okay to be
completely open and transparent with your pediatrician and just say look like we can't take this anymore
we need help so is there some way somehow that we can find answers or find a help and i i think
that's super important to have that open relationship with your pediatrician and if you don't feel you
have that relationship with your pediatrician i would say get a different one and i know that that's
easy for me to say when i i you know work at a clinic where i could just get my kids
seen by my wife's colleagues or whatever it may be when some people have an extremely hard time
finding a doctor or a pediatrician. And so I'd just say whenever you're looking for one,
shop around, find one that you think gels well with your family and that you really feel
that you could be open with. Yeah, I think that's really important.
Now, of course, the other alleged cause of autism, according to Bobby, is Tylenol use
in pregnancy.
And I know you're not a gynecologist, but your dad and a doctor, and I'm sure you know that
Tylenol continues to be the recommended treatment for fever in for women during pregnancy.
And this is kind of important because untreated fevers in pregnancy are linked to a wide
range of known risks for baby, including, ironically, autism.
And, you know, I had two successful pregnancy.
we were all told by our doctor, you know, don't take Advil, take Tylenol, it is totally safer baby.
And now with these headlines essentially suggesting, oh, no, it's not, you know, women, you know,
if you take a Tylenol, you're going to, you know, your kid's going to get autism.
Well, women are left feeling like, you know, the person that they trusted in this very overwhelming
process, which is pregnancy, you know, to not let them down to have the answers may have caused
their baby irreparable harm. And I'm going to talk about why not to freak out about the
Tylenol thing in a minute. But what do you think that this association might do when it comes to,
you know, all the already crumbling trust that folks have in medical authority? Yeah, that's a really
good question. And again, I'll reiterate, I'm not an OBGYN. And so ACOG has put out statements
about Tylenoy use in pregnancy. And I will just say that to me, I think this is extremely detrimental.
reasons. One, just as you said, Abby, that, you know, that these patients trusted their physicians
and if ACOG and their OBGYNs and maybe even the pediatricians told mothers that it was okay to use
Tylenol, and then you see someone in a place of authority saying that that's wrong and that it
causes autism, obviously that could break that relationship between patient and physician
when it's not necessary, especially when it's not true. And so that's one, I think, very detrimental
aspect of it. The second thing is it kind of, I guess you could say in one hand it puts the
blame on the doctor for recommended it. But the second part of that is telling mothers that they
did something wrong, that you took this and it caused this in your child. And therefore,
like, you shouldn't have done that. And I just don't think that's fair. I don't think that
having that kind of situation to make mothers feel like they did something that led to their
children to have autism is okay. Just because we know that that is not true.
That there, if for all the parents out there, if your child has autism, there's nothing that you did that led to that.
Like, that is an unfortunate, or I shouldn't say unfortunate, my child has autism.
And I, even though I get hate on social media for, what do they people say, for, like, glorifying or making autism seem like the most amazing thing in the world.
But, you know, like, I love my son so much and autism is part of who he is.
It doesn't define who he is, but it's part of who he is.
and I love all of it.
And so the diagnosis did not come from something that you did.
And I don't want you to have any guilt about that.
And so I think that just that narrative is dangerous in a multitude of different ways.
The third way that I think that is dangerous is that now you may have moms,
like you said, that have read these headlines, and now they're pregnant, and now they get a fever,
and they feel miserable, whether they have a virus or whatever it may be,
they feel absolutely terrible and now they're afraid to take anything and Abby I know that you're
going to go more into this but we know the associations of fever infections and other things
leading to harm to baby and potentially associations with autism as well and so I think that you
just put moms in an extremely challenging place and I don't think that's okay especially when
the data is not clear on it 100% and and we can't really get good data on women in pregnancy because
It's kind of, you know, it would never pass ethics to do a randomized control trial on people who were, you know, carrying babies.
But, you know, but the Tylenol, I don't want to glaze over the faulty science here that has informed these headlines because this is largely based on, you know, an observational study that found a 20% higher risk of autism and a 30% higher risk of ADHD for kids who had prolonged exposure to Tylenol or acetaminophen during pregnancy.
And smaller amounts did not seem to kind of increase the potential risk, but critical confounders were not even taken accounted for, including the fact that, like we said, maternal fever is a known risk factor for changes in fetal neurodevelopment.
And when you look at sibling studies, including one that had over 2.4 million kids, they actually found that all these associations disappeared.
And there was no increased risk of autism or ADHD or intellectual disability.
with prenatal Tylenol use.
So, you know, like you said,
some kids are just gonna be neurodivergent
and some aren't and I love that.
And I know that's hard for families to grapple with
because we always wanna be in control
of everything in this world that is, you know,
becoming more and more uncertain.
But that is the reality right now.
Yeah, and with these studies that you're talking about, Abby,
so, and I'm sure that your listeners
understand what compounding factors mean,
but, so for,
example, it would be that if mother, say, she has a fever, and then because of the fever
she takes Tylenol, how can you say that it was the Tylenol that caused the autism and
not the fever?
And so if you don't account for the fever, then you just leave that out of the picture, then it
would make you think that Tylenol causes it.
And not only that, there could be like hundreds of hundreds more confounding factors
throughout that.
And if you do not account for them, that it can make something seem causative when it's not
actually causative because there are so many other factors that you didn't take into account
for. Absolutely. And that is that's a huge problem when it comes to to research in pregnancy,
because again, we can't control confounders. Like we can't do a randomized control trial
where we can manipulate all the different variables. We're just looking at women and what they
did after the fact of pregnancy. And you know, like you said, like this, this disregard for
the nuance of science that we're talking about, this critical analysis and research is,
is very quickly eroding just public trust in doctors like you.
And I think perhaps the most dangerous outcome of this is the decline in vaccine confidence,
which you kind of alluded to earlier, because despite the mountain of evidence, very, very clearly
showing that vaccines do not cause or play a role in autism, we have RFK Jr. who has known ties
to anti-vaccine groups, just like conjuring up this hysteria, citing flawed resource.
that suggests there's some kind of link. As both a pediatrician and a parent of a
neurodivergent child, how does it feel to hear from parents who portray autism as so
tragic that they are willing to risk their child dying from a preventable disease like polio or
measles just so they don't become autistic? Yeah, for sure. I think there is
before I answer the question, I want to say that I understand that autism is on a spectrum.
So when people see my life and they see Oliver and they see that Oliver has autism, they see
that at one end of the spectrum.
But I'm well aware that there's another end of the spectrum where life could be extremely
difficult.
I've actually worked with children with autism since I was 16 years old all the way through
my high school years, my college years, and then ended up having a child with
autism. And I have worked with children that had, I'd say, debilitating behavioral issues due to some
neurodivergent tendencies that they had. And that was extremely hard for the family, whether that be
self-injurious behavior or destructive behavior, whatever it may be, those years and challenges
for the family was extremely, extremely difficult. And so when I say what I'm about to say, I just don't
want listeners to think that I do not see and understand that side of it as well.
But to say that autism is such a terrible thing, that you would rather your child have
meningitis, which is an infection in the brain caused by bacteria, measles or the complications
of measles later on down the road, which could be inflammation of the brain that could be
life-threatening or a multitude of other things, I do not think is correct.
And I think when we see the risks of potentially not having protection from these viruses
and bacteria versus the potential link of to have, or I'd say not even a link, but anyway,
having autism, I think it becomes very, very apparent that the risk of all these viruses
and bacteria are so much worse and detrimental to our health, especially when, you know,
even taking those two things aside, especially when we look at the data and see that it's not true.
And I think what upsets me the most is that you have these parents that are putting their trust
into these political leaders instead of physicians at this time because of the trust that's been lost
throughout the past half a decade maybe or a decade.
And then so they're relying on these people to give them credible information that they are
choosing life-altering decisions for their children with. And when it comes to vaccines,
we have seen that vaccines are safe and efficacious and have eradicated diseases and
comorbidities from viruses and bacteria that used to back in the day were extremely detrimental.
And unfortunately, due to this mistrust, there was just a couple polls that were published
one in early August and one just recently. And then NBC just posted another one, that vaccination
rates across the United States are drastically falling. And so over in the last five years,
that's dropped from around 95% of all children to now closer to 91 to 92%. And we know for herd
immunity depending on which bacteria or virus, we need like 95% or above. And so that is very
concerning. Yeah. No, I know. And I also want to acknowledge that any, like you said earlier,
any diagnosis, whether we're talking about neurodevelopmental or, you know, physical is, is so hard
for families especially, you know, when they're parenting multiple kids with different needs.
So I don't want to downplay that there are real challenges when it comes to parenting a child
with autism in, you know, not in all cases, but certainly in some. But I certainly do get rub the
wrong way when I hear people who are in support of vaccines even, say like, welcome.
come on, like an autistic child is better than a dead one.
Because while of course that is true,
I think that statement is just so stigmatizing
to neurodiversion folks.
And it also almost validates this false association
between vaccines and autism.
And this harms everyone because it harms our neurodivergent friends,
our new parents who have been made to feel
that they maybe have done something hugely wrong
if their child is on the spectrum.
And it also harms neurotypical folks,
we're now susceptible to the downstream risks of low vaccine uptake, which is what you're
discussing here. So this is not good for anybody right now. No, not at all. And so Abby, have you
watched the movie The Unbreakable Child? You know what? I don't think I have. So it is,
even just thinking about it, I'm about to cry. I just think I literally am about to cry,
just thinking about this movie. So I think it is like one of the most incredible movies.
And so it's about a boy who has osteogenesis imperfective.
And for the listeners, that's just you can think of it as like having brittle bones.
But he also has autism.
And you see into his world of living with autism.
And you see this dad that doesn't understand his child at all.
And then comes to understand his child's, I think, diagnoses and how his child feels
through seeing him live his life.
And it's just like one of the, even as a father to a son who has autism,
think that I'm very in tuned with Oliver. It even made me realize even more what Oliver's
experiencing and why he might have some of these behaviors at times. And like I'm getting so
frustrated. Like Oliver just like be calm. Calm down. But it's like he needs this. Like he like some
of these things like he's experiencing. We can't grasp or understand what it is. And that doesn't
make it wrong. And that doesn't make it bad. It just makes it different for him. And I just think
it is such a great movie that would help the world understand autism so much more.
I love that recommendation. I will definitely, I'll link to that in the show notes below.
And not to be dark, but again, as a pediatrician, as a dentist, as a,
dad. What do you feel, like what is your biggest fear as it relates to this kind of like autism
witch hunt that the health secretary and the Maha movement has begun? Yeah, I think a few things.
One would be further stigmatizing children with autism or, I mean, adults with autism, anyone with
autism, anybody that's neurodivergent, just because even some of the language that they use
when talking about it is very stigmatizing. And I made a very very very very.
video that RFK Jr. was talking about children with autism and was talking about they'll
never pay taxes, they'll never live on their own, they'll never do any of these things.
And like he may feel like that and he may think that, but that's not truth and that's not
reality. Is that true for some children? Maybe. Is it true for all of them? Not at all.
And so I think that just the language in people, the society further stigmatizing children
with autism, I think is extremely detrimental. Number two would be policy changes if they continue
to try to go down this route of false information and saying that vaccines cause autism
and maybe them not allowing for certain vaccines to be covered by insurance or their
recommendations going down about hepatitis B or MMR or these vaccines and then not making
them required when we're already seeing vaccination rates declining to 92 percent and we've
already seen the most cases of measles that we've seen in decades to see that further
worsen and then to see what used to be almost eradicated diseases now become a lot more prevalent
and we see herd immunity lost and then a lot more children getting sick. Like it would be an absolute
tragedy to have to repeat the medical harm that happened from viruses and bacteria that we that the
world experienced decades ago because of misinformation. Yeah, 100%. I think those are all things to be
very nervous about. I mean, I'm going to go darker for me and me. I have a tendency to spiral
when it comes to some of these things. And, you know, we just have to look at history of eugenics
and the treatment of disabled people to feel that there is a possibility if autism is cast as
this quote, quote, epidemic that, you know, we need to eliminate. Could our wonderful
neurodivergent children be cataloged or targeted or treated as like second class citizens just
based on their diagnosis and and i worry that that shame and the judgment of all of this being
caused by you know moms quote-unquote bad choices will also mean that fewer families are going to
want to even get a diagnosis right which of course then is going to sure it's going to make
look make it look like the numbers have gone down so like yay you know like removing that food additive
have cured all the autism, when in fact, we just know that more kids are suffering without the
support they need. And so none of this is going to be good for our kids. Yeah, I agree completely.
And even to the point of like children being institutionalized when maybe they don't need to,
just because the stigma and the rhetoric behind what people with autism are like. And we know
that, especially in the, I'd say the 70s through the 90s, there were many different things.
facilities in which people with autism or maybe neurodivergent children that had behavioral
issues would be put into that were violent, abusive, and not okay, which thankfully now a majority
have been shut down throughout the United States.
I think, unfortunately, there's still a couple that are still practicing.
And the type of therapies that they would use, whether that be shock therapies or physical
restraint therapies or whatever they may be, were not beneficial to these children.
and my fear is that resurgence of different facilities like this would come about.
And I just do not think that's okay.
And so I'm at the end of the day, an extremely optimistic person as it is, probably to a fault.
So I really don't think it'll get that bad, but the fear is still there that it could.
Right.
And I want to harness that optimism and end on a positive note because I realize a lot of discussions
about the state of public health are kind of bleak.
right now. But is there anything you could share with parents or soon-to-be parents who perhaps
have become paranoid about the prospects of having a child on the spectrum?
Yeah. What I would say is that if you are someone and you are reading into the headlines that
you're seeing online, I would just ask you to not try to, and I know this is like impossible to do,
but try to stay out of the conspiracy theory, the conspiracy theory blogs, the conspiracy theory news,
and try to stick to the truths.
And the truth that we know are that vaccines do not cause autism.
That if your child has autism, that there are a multitude of processes in place currently
to get your child the support they need.
And if you find a pediatrician that will help you to get that support, then your child can reach
their fullest potential, whatever that may be, even if they have autism. As a father to a child with
autism, even though the initial heartbreak of, will my child be able to go to prom? Will he play
football? Will he ever drive? Will he ever live on his own? All of those things are completely
normal. But once I came to notice that those were hopes and dreams that I had in my mind for him,
and Oliver is his own person. And I need to support what his hope.
hopes and dreams are. And right now, it is playing with rocks in the yard or playing with sand.
And seeing his joy for life is one of the most beautiful things. And when I started to align
my goals for Oliver with the goals that he had, even if they may be different than what the
world would expect for a typical five-year-old, my life became so much more beautiful.
And finding joy and happiness in the things that make Oliver happy has made me, has continues
to make me extremely, extremely happy.
And so I would just say lean on evidence-based practitioners such as your pediatrician, your OBGYN,
the American Academy of Pediatrics, ACOG, and these organizations that will stop the fear-mongering,
that will give you real evidence about what's going on, and then will also help you get the
support you need, rather than just throw fearful lies at you to make you scared about having
a child that may end up with autism.
I, wow, that was so beautiful. Thank you so much, Tommy. So insightful. I'm so moved by your
words and your expertise. And I hope it provides some critical new insights for folks who are
trying to, you know, make sense of all these fear-mongering headlines. But I'm going to leave
a link to all your social media. Thank you again so much for joining us.
Such an honor. Thank you.
I have been so moved by this.
conversation as someone who is neurodivergent. But I also have to say that, you know,
getting a diagnosis and treatment in my late 30s was actually a massive positive turning
point in my life. You know, despite all this conversation about neurodivergence being like
the plague or like an epidemic, I honestly feel that getting a diagnosis got me the sparkle back
that I had lost for many, many years.
literally over a decade. So for those who are listening who perhaps have a neurodivergent child
or is feeling anxious about this fear-driven narrative around autism right now, I just want to
share a little kind of ode to my own experience to leave us all with a different perspective.
I truly love the way my neurodiversion mind works. I love my ability to think outside the box,
my passion-driven productivity, my boundless energy, and my persistence, all of which have been
critical to my career success. I also am very grateful for my rich intuition and deep empathy,
which I really do believe has made me a really good friend. I know, and I feel like everyone in my
life knows, that these are real superpowers. These are actually sought after traits. And not just
in me, but the vast majority of people that I gravitate towards in my life are also
neurodivergent. And obviously everyone has their own unique flavor, but I've really found that
my friends with autism and ADHD are incredibly curious, highly intelligent, creative, magnetic,
and compassionate humans that I can't not want to be around. There is no question that having autism
or ADHD presents challenges in our neurotypical world.
But overcoming those challenges to build greatness, as so many folks with ASD do,
is actually evidence that we shouldn't be looking to, quote, quote, cure their minds.
And obviously I don't know if we have like sex reports to back this up,
but according to a lot of expert speculation, if we had quote, quote, cured autism,
we maybe wouldn't have Einstein's relativity, or Mozart's symphonies, or Michelangelo's Sistine Chapel.
I'm not knocking our neurotypicals, but it might be a very gray world without neurodiversion people.
So rather than investing our energy in this witch hunt for the quote unquote root cause or cure for autism,
we should be focusing our research and discussions around building supportive environments
to let these gorgeous, beautiful minds thrive.
And that, my friends, is, I think, all I've got for today.
But I would love if you would give Dr. Tommy Martin a follow
and leave us a nice little comment in a five-star review
in the comment section to show your support.
It really does mean so much.
But signing off with Science and Saz, I'm Abby Sharp.
Thanks for listening.
You know,