08 April 2007

Autism awareness "elevator pitch"

In her recent post Autism Speaks Now, Kristina Chew contemplates the discrepancies between the types of autism research actually being conducted and the types of autism research that are covered in the media (my emphasis):

[A] study by Stanford University researchers published in the February Nature Reviews Neuroscience notes, brain and behavior research on autism accounts for 41 percent of research funding and published scientific papers and only 11 percent of newspaper stories in the United States, United Kingdom and Canada. In contrast, 13 percent of published research was on environmental causes of autism but 48 percent of the media coverage was on this topic: When it comes to reporting on autism, there is a serious gap between scientific research and the mass media; in the case of some reporting on thimerasol and autism, parents are pitted against scientists. Autism Speaks, with its access to the full power of the media, will be getting its message out.
Kristina goes on to ask how scientists (and, by extension, we) can overcome this issue (emphasis is again mine).
I would be curious as to how scientists might “frame” some “hot button” issues in autism: As the back-and-forth in the comments on a post about David Kirby and Autism Speaks, facts and research studies can be cited, but people’s beliefs are not so easily swayed. What are vaccines and chelation but “highly politicized topics” in autism circles? How might a scientist refute such theories and treatments by “strategically avoid[ing] emphasizing the technical details of science”; by translating technical knowledge with an eye to the fact that this alone does not “drive decision-making or change minds”? It needs to be recognized that, when it comes to understanding autism, parents do not rely on facts and evidence and science alone; that emotions—however much acknowledged, or not—play a huge role.
We have to remember, too, that last sentence applies not only to parents but to the media who would reach those parents. And also to the people who are trying to get these parents to give money to pursue a cause.

To reach these people, you need to be able to get your message across quickly, to the point, and convincingly. While it may be possible to get the point across convincingly using the scientific data as a basis, this will not likely be either quick or to the point.

What we need is an "autism awareness elevator pitch." Imagine you find yourself on the elevator with Oprah's producer (to follow the thread started by Kristina), and you have until you get to the top floor to explain why Oprah should dedicate an hour to your view of autism. Here's the quick sound byte that probably helped get Autism Speaks onto Oprah:
This is the national health crisis of our time……..This is bigger than AIDS. This is bigger than breast cancer, and almost no attention seems to be paid to it.
There a lot of ways to approach this (scientist, parent, autistic), I want to hear them all.

So..., what's your pitch?

4 comments:

kristina said...

I'm thinking what mine would be.....

Larry Arnold PhD FRSA said...

Research does not exist in a vacuum it is a socio-economic societal phenomenon, and usually goes where the money is.

Unless one is rich and leisured one cannot secure funding to do peer reviewed research without having to compromise ones principles to some extent else one does not get the University place.

With the economic pester power that the Autism Fascists (you know who they are) have it is difficult to get purposeful research done.

David N. Andrews M. Ed., C. P. S. E. said...

Just want to add my weight behind Laurence's statement above...

Brett said...

Laurence and David,

Sounds to me like pessimism born of experience. I may be a bit naive about how the whole research/fund raising world works, but I'm not ready to give up hope yet.

To rephrase my request for an elevator pitch, how would you respond to someone who said to you, "Your son is autistic? How awful! How do you deal with it?"