Type your answer here... The child is acting out for one or more of 3 reasons:
To gain something (e.g attention, food, enjoyment), to escape or avoid something, or to communicate their feelings.
the condition is autism Autism is a disibilty itself
Unless the child actually bought them, they have no personal belongings.
No, autism cannot kill a child - no more than having neurotypical brain could.
no.
It is unlikely that your child would have autism. There is a genetic component to autism, so it is more likely that you would have a child with autism than a couple with no history of autism in their backgrounds. However, it is still more likely that your child will not have autism than have autism.
most people with autistic children, autism is not fatal
According to David Hormander in Harvard medical studies men with clear sperm can never have a child. If they do, for some reason the child will be born with some sort of autism.
Her youngest son has Down's Syndrome, but she has a nephew with autism.
This characteristic is not enough to diagnose autism. Children with autism might babble at 8 months. Children with hearing problems might not babble at 8 months. The child might have autism if he or she has additional signs of autism and other possibilities are eliminated.
You don't have a child with autism, you have an Autistic child - recognise their identity. Having an Autistic child isn't what makes you depressed, the fact you're ableist towards that child is making you depressed because you believe that child is worth less as an Autistic person.Get away from other 'Autism Moms'/'Autism Parents' and avoid organizations like Autism Speaks which see Autism as a bad thing, go talk to Autistic people and parents who are allies to their Autistic children so you get a better understanding of how to effectively care for your child and stop seeing them as some sort of burden. Your child is not to blame for your depression.
If someone in your family has autism spectrum disorder (ASD), you may be more likely to have a child with ASD. ASD can look very different from person to person, so taking a careful family health history can be important for early diagnosis.
No one 'ends up' with autism - a person is born autistic.