UWEEK
Feature Articles
ETC.
Campus Calendar
Notices
News Makers
Photos
Contact Us
News Archives
Search UWeek

Health Sciences
HS Articles
HS Brief News

Current Issue


UW Awards 2000



Gift establishes Autism Center based at CHDD

The UW’s Center on Human Development and Disability (CHDD) has received an unprecedented gift of $5 million to endow a new center for the treatment of autism, to encourage early intervention, and to expand training of professionals.

In what is believed to be the largest gift ever made to the UW for a specific disorder, a personal donation of $5 million from Microsoft executive Richard W. Fade and his wife, Susan, is expected to be matched by a $5 million grant from an anonymous funding source, for a total of $10 million. Fade is Microsoft’s vice president of OEM Multinational Accounts. The Fades have a family member with autism.

 
Geraldine Dawson, left, director of the new Autism Center, at the news conference announcing the gift from Richard Fade, right, and his wife Susan.

The director of the new Autism Center is Dr. Geraldine Dawson, a UW professor of psychology and a nationally recognized expert in autism research and treatment. She directs a multidisciplinary research program, centered at the CHDD and funded by the National Institutes of Health, aimed at improving early detection and treatment of autism and understanding its cause.

“Autism is more common than childhood deafness or cancer and is growing,” said Richard Fade. “With this endowment we hope to create a center of excellence that will enable the Center on Human Development and Disability to increase its focus on delivering services to children with autism and their families, to provide increased opportunities for training of professionals, and to raise awareness of this disorder from various disciplines in the general community.”

“We need more research to understand the causes of autism. Until that time this center will help raise awareness and help children and families today,” said Susan Fade.

“These are extraordinary gifts for which we are very grateful,” said Dr. Michael J. Guralnick, director of the CHDD. “Communities around the country are wrestling with a dramatic increase in the incidence of autism and the need for highly intensive treatment. The CHDD already has strong programs in autism research and related areas. This endowment will enable us to greatly expand one of our missions: to provide comprehensive interventions for children with autism and related developmental disabilities.”

“We are so thankful for this generous endowment and are thrilled at the opportunities it provides,” said Dawson. “It will have a tremendous impact on the lives of many children with autism and their families. The response to early intervention can be dramatic, but children are often not diagnosed early enough and there are not enough services available.

“This endowment will allow us to expand our program of public information and outreach, so that health care providers locally and across the country can begin to identify children with autism at younger ages, when they can most benefit from treatment. Our goals are to provide intensive early intervention, and to build greater capacity for treatment, both at the center and in the community.”

Dawson points out that early treatment can result in a significant increase in IQ and improvement in daily functioning. “These results stand in stark contrast to the very poor outcomes of children who do not receive early intervention,” she said.

In accord with the endowment, the CHDD Autism Center’s mission is fivefold:

1) to provide coordinated state-of-the-art services for individuals with autism spectrum disorders and related developmental disabilities and their families;

2) to provide professional training to increase the community’s capacity to provide such services;

3) to increase knowledge and awareness of such disorders in the professional community and the general public;

4) to serve as a model for delivering services in other communities across the nation; and

5) to collaborate with existing and future clinical and research programs relevant to autism and related disabilities at the UW Center on Human Development and Disability and in the broader community.”

Autism is characterized by impaired ability for social interaction, communication problems and a limited range of interests, resulting from brain abnormalities. It typically manifests itself during the first three years of life. Autism has been estimated to occur in as many as one in 500 individuals and is four times more prevalent in boys than in girls. Family income, lifestyle and educational levels do not affect its occurrence. More than half a million people in the U.S. have autism or a related disorder, making it one of the most common developmental disabilities.

For more information, see the CHDD’s web site at http://depts.washington.edu/chdd/ and the CHDD Autism Center web site at http://depts.washington.edu/uwautism/, or call the center at (206) 221-6806. ¶

Laurie McHale, CHDD




University Week
The faculty and staff publication of the University of Washington
uweek@u.washington.edu
June 22, 2000