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People with Autism Die Decades Before General Population

Why people with ASD are dying early; The Hungarian health workers protesting against corrupt doctors; How the threat of losing financial incentives encourages people to exercise

A large study from Sweden has confirmed that people with autism live shorter lives on average than other people; with some of those affected only surviving until the age of 40. The team conducting the research looked at the health records of 27,000 adults with autism and compared them with 2.7 million people in the general population in Sweden. Dr Tatja Hirvikoski, from the Centre for Neurodevelopmental Disorders at the Karolinska Institute, tells Health Check what they discovered.

Hungary health
In Hungary there is a growing shortage of doctors and nurses, as more and more leave the country for jobs in northern Europe where they can earn up to six times as much. Currently the healthcare system is in need of around 20,000 more nurses and in nine years it is predicted that half of the country will not have a proper GP system. But it is not just higher salaries elsewhere that is causing the exodus. Another reason is because of what some regard as a moral crisis in Hungarian health care. Many doctors feel humiliated by the widespread practice of ‘gratitude payments’; the semi-illegal envelope cash that some doctors expect from their patients after, or sometimes before they receive treatment. These payments are used to supplement low wages. The 91Èȱ¬â€™s Budapest correspondent Nick Thorpe has been investigating.

Cash for exercise
If you have ever tried sticking to a new exercise regime, you will know that it is easy to start with good intentions, but harder to keep going week in week out. But what if you were paid each time you did it, or alternatively promised a sum of money and then fined if you did not manage to complete your goal that day? Which is more likely to work better? A team at the University of Pennsylvania in the US has just put this to the test. Dr Mitesh Patel, assistant professor of medicine and healthcare management at the Perelman School of Medicine, tells Claudia what was involved with the experiment.

(Photo: An autistic teenager hugs his mother. Credit: Loic Venance/AFP/Getty Images)

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