Thursday, July 1, 2010

Asperger Syndrome survival guide







Dave Angel

Author: “Parenting Aspergers Resource Guide” 

ANNOUNCING: The Parenting Aspergers Resource Guide Your Simple Guide To Helping Your Child With Aspergers In Almost Any Situation!

This Is Your Invitation To “Test-Drive” A Life-Changing Aspergers Guide, Which Has Already Helped 1,674 People Worldwide!

Here’s How To Get Your Copy of The Parenting Aspergers Resource Guide, The Parenting Aspergers Resource Guide is not available in bookshops, Amazon or eBay. You can only get it here.

   I myself have a child with Asperger Syndrome so I know how it is to try to handle it on your own, that is why I created my own Asperger Syndrome survival guide! This Resource Guide is a perfect start on creating your own survival guide. Remember that this is the only place to get The Resource Guide!

   Information on this site you won't find at the library or bookstore. And information you desperately need if you want your loved one to finally enjoy a "normal" life and do all the things you take for granted, on this site you will find the information you are looking for! 

   Although diagnosed mainly in children, AS is being increasingly diagnosed in adults who seek medical help for mental health conditions such as depression, obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD).  No studies have yet been conducted to determine the incidence of AS in adult populations.  In 1944, an Austrian pediatrician named Hans Asperger observed four children in his practice who had difficulty integrating socially.  Although their intelligence appeared normal, the children lacked nonverbal communication skills, failed to demonstrate empathy with their peers, and were physically clumsy.

   A child's obsessive interest in a single object or topic is the most distinguishing symptom of Asperger Syndrome. Believe it or not children with Aspergers become experts on makes and models of cars, vacuum cleaners, even objects as odd as deep fat fryers. A lack of rhythm, a monotone pitch, or an odd inflection, may be marked in their speech. Modulating the volume of their voice to matching their surroundings, Children with (AS), often lack the ability. Not widely known until 1981, Lorna Wing, an English doctor, published a series of case studies of children showing similar symptoms, she called it “Asperger’s syndrome"!




  


 

 

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