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The ethics of predicting autism spectrum disorder in infancy
MacDuffie, K. E., Estes, A. M., Peay, H. L., Pruett, J. R., & Wilfond, B. S. (2021). The ethics of predicting autism spectrum disorder in infancy. Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, 60(8), 942-945. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jaac.2021.01.006
Toward the end of a routine check-in appointment with your young patient-a 3-year-old boy recently diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder (ASD)-his mother shares concerns about his infant sister, currently 6 months old. The mother is aware that her daughter is at increased risk for ASD. She requests a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scan of her infant's brain, based on research she has read showing that MRI can be used to predict which infants will go on to develop ASD. The mother communicates that she is eager to know whether her daughter is going to develop autism so that she and her husband can prepare financially, and so she can place her daughter on the long waitlist for autism-specific services in her local community. As this family's psychiatrist, how should you respond to her request?