Introduction to Mental Retardation
What is mental retardation?
An individual is considered
to have mental retardation based on the following three
criteria: intellectual functioning level (IQ) is below
70-75; significant limitations exist in two or more
adaptive skill areas; and the condition is present from
childhood (defined as age 18 or less) (AAMR, 1992).
What are the adaptive
skills essential for daily functioning?
Adaptive skill areas are
those daily living skills needed to live, work and play in
the community. They include communication, self-care, home
living, social skills, leisure, health and safety,
self-direction, functional academics (reading, writing,
basic math), community use and work.
Adaptive skills are
assessed in the person's typical environment across all
aspects of an individual's life. A person with limits in
intellectual functioning who does not have limits in
adaptive skill areas may not be diagnosed as having mental
retardation.
How many people are
affected by mental retardation?
The Arc reviewed a number
of prevalence studies in the early 1980s and concluded
that 2.5 to 3 percent of the general population have
mental retardation (The Arc, 1982).
Based on the 1990 census,
an estimated 6.2 to 7.5 million people have mental
retardation. Mental retardation is 10 times more common
than cerebral palsy and 28 times more prevalent than
neural tube defects such as spina bifida. It affects 25
times as many people as blindness (Batshaw, 1997).
Mental retardation cuts
across the lines of racial, ethnic, educational, social
and economic backgrounds. It can occur in any family. One
out of ten American families is directly affected by
mental retardation.
How does mental
retardation affect individuals?
The effects of mental
retardation vary considerably among people, just as the
range of abilities varies considerably among people who do
not have mental retardation. About 87 percent will be
mildly affected and will be only a little slower than
average in learning new information and skills. As
children, their mental retardation is not readily apparent
and may not be identified until they enter school. As
adults, many will be able to lead independent lives in the
community and will no longer be viewed as having mental
retardation.
The remaining 13 percent of
people with mental retardation, those with IQs under 50,
will have serious limitations in functioning. However,
with early intervention, a functional education and
appropriate supports as an adult, all can lead satisfying
lives in the community.
How is mental
retardation diagnosed?
The AAMR process for
diagnosing and classifying a person as having mental
retardation contains three steps and describes the system
of supports a person needs to overcome limits in adaptive
skills.
The first step in diagnosis
is to have a qualified person give one or more
standardized intelligence tests and a standardized
adaptive skills test, on an individual basis.
The second step is to
describe the person's strengths and weaknesses across four
dimensions. The four dimensions are:
1. Intellectual and
adaptive behavior skills
2. Psychological/emotional considerations
3. Physical/health/etiological considerations
4. Environmental considerations
Strengths and weaknesses
may be determined by formal testing, observations,
interviewing key people in the individual's life,
interviewing the individual, interacting with the person
in his or her daily life or a combination of these
approaches.
The third step requires an
interdisciplinary team to determine needed supports across
the four dimensions. Each support identified is assigned
one of four levels of intensity - intermittent, limited,
extensive, pervasive.
Intermittent support refers
to support on an "as needed basis." An example
would be support that is needed in order for a person to
find a new job in the event of a job loss. Intermittent
support may be needed occasionally by an individual over
the lifespan, but not on a continuous daily basis.
Limited support may occur
over a limited time span such as during transition from
school to work or in time-limited job training. This type
of support has a limit on the time that is needed to
provide appropriate support for an individual.
Extensive support in a life
area is assistance that an individual needs on a daily
basis that is not limited by time. This may involve
support in the home and/or support in work. Intermittent,
limited and extensive supports may not be needed in all
life areas for an individual.
Pervasive support refers to
constant support across environments and life areas and
may include life-sustaining measures. A person requiring
pervasive support will need assistance on a daily basis
across all life areas.
What does the term
"mental age" mean when used to describe the
person's functioning?
The term mental age is used
in intelligence testing. It means that the individual
received the same number of correct responses on a
standardized IQ test as the average person of that age in
the sample population.
Saying that an older person
with mental retardation is like a person of a younger age
or has the "mind" or "understanding"
of a younger person is incorrect usage of the term. The
mental age only refers to the intelligence test score. It
does not describe the level and nature of the person's
experience and functioning in aspects of community life.
What are the causes of
mental retardation?
Mental retardation can be
caused by any condition which impairs development of the
brain before birth, during birth or in the childhood
years. Several hundred causes have been discovered, but in
about one-third of the people affected, the cause remains
unknown. The three major known causes of mental
retardation are Down syndrome, fetal alcohol syndrome and
fragile X.
The causes can be
categorized as follows:
- Genetic conditions
- These result from abnormality of genes inherited
from parents, errors when genes combine, or from other
disorders of the genes caused during pregnancy by
infections, overexposure to x-rays and other factors.
More than 500 genetic diseases are associated with
mental retardation. Some examples include PKU (phenylketonuria),
a single gene disorder also referred to as an inborn
error of metabolism because it is caused by a
defective enzyme. Down syndrome is an example of a
chromosomal disorder. Chromosomal disorders happen
sporadically and are caused by too many or too few
chromosomes, or by a change in structure of a
chromosome. Fragile X syndrome is a single gene
disorder located on the X chromosome and is the
leading inherited cause of mental retardation.
- Problems during
pregnancy - Use of alcohol or drugs by the
pregnant mother can cause mental retardation. Recent
research has implicated smoking in increasing the risk
of mental retardation. Other risks include
malnutrition, certain environmental contaminants, and
illnesses of the mother during pregnancy, such as
toxoplasmosis, cytomegalovirus, rubella and syphillis.
Pregnant women who are infected with HIV may pass the
virus to their child, leading to future neurological
damage.
- Problems at birth -
Although any birth condition of unusual stress may
injure the infant's brain, prematurity and low birth
weight predict serious problems more often than any
other conditions.
- Problems after birth
- Childhood diseases such as whooping cough, chicken
pox, measles, and Hib disease which may lead to
meningitis and encephalitis can damage the brain, as
can accidents such as a blow to the head or near
drowning. Lead, mercury and other environmental toxins
can cause irreparable damage to the brain and nervous
system.
- Poverty and cultural
deprivation - Children in poor families may become
mentally retarded because of malnutrition,
disease-producing conditions, inadequate medical care
and environmental health hazards. Also, children in
disadvantaged areas may be deprived of many common
cultural and day-to-day experiences provided to other
youngsters. Research suggests that such
under-stimulation can result in irreversible damage
and can serve as a cause of mental retardation.
Can mental retardation be
prevented?
During the past 30 years,
significant advances in research have prevented many cases
of mental retardation. For example, every year in the
United States, we prevent:
- 250 cases of mental
retardation due to phenylketonuria (PKU) by newborn
screening and dietary treatment;
- 1,000 cases of mental
retardation due to congenital hypothyroidism thanks to
newborn screening and thyroid hormone replacement
therapy;
- 1,000 cases of mental
retardation by use of anti-Rh immune globulin to
prevent Rh disease and severe jaundice in newborn
infants;
- 5,000 cases of mental
retardation caused by Hib diseases by using the Hib
vaccine;
- 4,000 cases of mental
retardation due to measles encephalitis thanks to
measles vaccine; and
- untold numbers of cases
of mental retardation caused by rubella during
pregnancy thanks to rubella vaccine (Alexander, 1998).
Other interventions have
reduced the chance of mental retardation. Removing lead
from the environment reduces brain damage in children.
Preventive interventions such as child safety seats and
bicycle helmets reduce head trauma. Early intervention
programs with high-risk infants and children have shown
remarkable results in reducing the predicted incidence of
subnormal intellectual functioning.
Finally, early
comprehensive prenatal care and preventive measures prior
to and during pregnancy increase a woman's chances of
preventing mental retardation. Pediatric AIDS is being
reduced by AZT treatment of the mother during pregnancy,
and dietary supplementation with folic acid reduces the
risk of neural tube defects.
Research continues on new
ways to prevent mental retardation, including research on
the development and function of the nervous system, a wide
variety of fetal treatments, and gene therapy to correct
the abnormality produced by defective genes.
References
American Association on
Mental Retardation. (1992). Mental Retardation:
Definition, Classification, and Systems of Supports, 9th
Edition. Washington, DC.
Alexander, D. (1998).
Prevention of Mental Retardation: Four Decades of
Research. Mental Retardation and Developmental
Disabilities Research Reviews. 4: 50-58
Batshaw, M. (1997). Children
With Disabilities. Baltimore: Paul H. Brookes
Publishing Co.
The Arc. (1982). The
Prevalence of Mental Retardation. (out-of-print).
Where can I go for more
information?
You will find a wide
variety of information on The Arc’s home page on the
World Wide Web: The Arc.org/. You can also contact staff
at the national headquarters for more information.
Or, call your local chapter
of The Arc.
Publication #101-2
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