Re: Mother wants to chemically castrate her autistic son
Posted: Thu Apr 14, 2016 12:45 pm
The idea that chemical castration might help a boy who is autistic is quack science at its finest. Clear back in 2003, Dr. Simon Baron-Cohen, Director of the Autism Research Center at Cambridge University found that there was a correlation (NOT necessarily a causation) between high fetal testosterone levels and later diagnosis with Asperger's. It's just as likely that something else is causing both as there is that one is causing the other, or some combination of causes. There is still some controversy over the findings, and no one has ever shown any direct causal relationship between high fetal testosterone and autism---in either direction.
Dr. Mark Geier, MD in Maryland, one of the prominent anti-vaxxers, took the idea and ran with it....far beyond any hint of what Baron-Cohen had found. Geier and his son David (who claimed the title of "Doctor," though he only had a B.A. in biology) began using high doses of Lupron to chemically castrate autistic boys. They used doses ten times higher than were necessary for castration of an adult and charged patients about $5000 per month, after charging them $12,000 for strange lab tests that were debunked by others as meaningless. Geier's medical license was revoked in 2011 for his quack treatments, though there are apparently still some who believe.
Dr. Mark Geier, MD in Maryland, one of the prominent anti-vaxxers, took the idea and ran with it....far beyond any hint of what Baron-Cohen had found. Geier and his son David (who claimed the title of "Doctor," though he only had a B.A. in biology) began using high doses of Lupron to chemically castrate autistic boys. They used doses ten times higher than were necessary for castration of an adult and charged patients about $5000 per month, after charging them $12,000 for strange lab tests that were debunked by others as meaningless. Geier's medical license was revoked in 2011 for his quack treatments, though there are apparently still some who believe.