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Through repetition and reinforcement in ABA (Applied Behaviour Therapy) Charlie has learnt to develop language and communication skills via an electronic tablet. His voice is not his own but a monotone, synthesised one which he’s now using to recruit anyone within earshot to help him raid the pantry.

Charlie has what’s known in the US as ‘level three’ autism and is non-verbal. Credit: SBS Dateline
“Before his (communication) device, he was screaming hundreds of times an hour. He had no way of communicating his needs,” says his mum Eileen Lamb.
Those different needs play out every day in Eileen’s home.
A spectrum of experience
“And then there’s me. Ten years ago, I was diagnosed with high-functioning autism.”
This is partly why his bedroom is dominated by what Eileen calls a “baby jail”.

Charlie’s bed zips all the way around to prevent him from leaving at night. This is partly to prevent him from eating inedible objects, as he has a condition called ‘pica’. Credit: SBS Dateline
“Most parents read a book and tuck their child in bed at night. I have to zip my child safety bed so he doesn’t kill himself overnight. I know this sounds extreme, but this is what we have to do,” she says.
Australia also describes autism according to three levels, with the National Disability Insurance Scheme tailoring support based on a person’s needs.
As the definition of ASD expands, for the most powerful people shaping US health policy, answers about its cause have narrowed.
Debunked claims back in the spotlight
This week, they extended that link to the use of the painkiller paracetamol (popularly marketed under the brand name Tylenol in the US) during pregnancy.
Australia’s Therapeutic Goods Administration joined other global medicine regulators, clinicians and scientists in rejecting a link, saying scientific evidence shows “no causal link between the use of paracetamol in pregnancy and autism”.
“Autism destroys families, and more importantly, it destroys our greatest resource, which is our children,” Kennedy said in April this year.

US health secretary Robert F Kennedy Jr has received criticism for his comments about autistic children. He has pledged to investigate the “causes” of autism. Credit: AAP / Sipa USA / Aaron Schwartz
He’s also tapped discredited researcher and vaccine sceptic David Geier to investigate possible links between vaccines and autism. In 2011, Geier was disciplined by the Maryland State Board of Physicians for practising medicine without a licence.
Kennedy has raised the ire of many by reviving long-debunked studies linking what he calls “environmental injuries” to autism.
Where did the debunked claims linking vaccines to autism begin?
Subsequent studies have found no link between vaccines and autism. But Wakefield’s false claims led to a global scare resulting in plummeting vaccination rates and a rise in outbreaks of measles and mumps.
“About 80 per cent heritable. Around 95 per cent encompassed by genetic forms,” he says.

Dr Daniel Geschwind oversees his namesake laboratory at UCLA. Credit: SBS Dateline
He doesn’t understand Kennedy’s focus on vaccines and other factors, saying the science is clear.
“I feel sad that the world has come to a place where credible science is being disregarded.”
Caught in the middle of this world of competing narratives are autistic people who each have their own unique expression of the condition.
Diagnosis ‘made my life make sense’
Lyric is a US-based advocate and consultant who runs the Neurodivergent Rebel blog.

Lyric is an advocate in the “actually autistic” movement. Credit: SBS Dateline
Lyric says their autism includes hyperfocus, the ability to concentrate intensely for long periods. It’s a trait that’s bolstered their advocacy in championing the real-life experiences of those who identify as “actually autistic”.
“There’s unfortunately a movement of people that have been led to believe that autism is this separate entity from their child. That if they can somehow pull it out, there’s some kind of normal child that’s just hiding under all of this autism, but it’s this view that’s not very realistic or humanising,” they say.
“As an autistic person I feel I’m uniquely qualified to comment on RFK’s propaganda and anti-autistic bullshit he’s spreading today,” Lyric says.
Debate within the community
“I’m not teaching Charlie to be normal. I’m teaching him skills that most people take for granted, like communication, like safety, self-care. These are things that he deserves,” she says.
Families like Eileen’s are caught up in America’s autism war. Credit: SBS Dateline
“Autism is a disability. Even in the most accepting society, Charlie would still swallow screws. He would still run in front of cars. There is no making society safe for Charlie.”
— With additional reporting by Phoebe Mcilwraith.