Speakers
J. Michael Uszler, M.D.
J.
Michael Uszler, M.D. is Board-certified Nuclear Medicine
physician who has been using brain SPECT function imaging
in childhood and adult brain disorders for 15 years,
including autistic disorders for more than ten years.
He is the founder and medical director of Santa Monica
Imaging and Therapy Associates in Santa Monica, California
and Assistant Clinical Professor of Molecular and Medical
Pharmacology at UCLA. His latest focus is on “Seeing
autism from the Inside-Out.” i.e., using brain
function imaging to look at regional brain function patterns
in ASD, including co-morbidity factors such as seizure
disorder, anxiety and mood disorders and obsessive/compulsive-like
tendencies. His work has also included “spect scanning” to
evaluate the effects of hyperbaric oxygen therapy in
the healing of brain injury and dysfunction, and is a
medical advisor for the International Hyperbaric Association.
For Michael Uszler's biography, click
here.
Jeff Bradstreet, M.D., F.A.A.F.P.
Dr.
Bradstreet attended the University of South Florida for
both undergraduate and medical school, graduating from
medical school in 1979. While attending medical school
he received research grants from the Robert Wood Johnson
Foundation, the American Cancer Society and the South
Atlantic OB/GYN Society. He participated in research
in the properties of HSV-1 and 2 replication with Dr.
Gerald Lancz of the school's virology department.
He has been in Family Practice since 1984. In 1997,
his son was diagnosed with autism and since then he has
redirected his efforts to autism research and treatments.
He is co-founder of the International Child Development
Resource Center in Melbourne, Florida where he treats
children from around the world. The center has two full-time
physicians, several research assistants, behavior therapists
and a consulting staff in clinical psychology.
Dr. Bradstreet has presented his research findings at
conferences around the globe and has affiliations for
research with Tulane, Washington University, St. Louis,
Utah State University, University of Arizona, McGill
University, University of Cambridge, Boston University,
and University of Copenhagen. He has advised Congress
and the National Academies of Sciences - The Institute
of Medicine on his findings, and has numerous papers
in the process of publication. He is a Fellow of the
American Academy of Family Physicians.
For Dr.
Bradstreet's biography, click
here.
Valerie Paradiz, PhD
Valerie
Paradiz, PhD, is a writer and the Director of Education
at New York University Child Study Center’s Asperger
Institute (www.aboutourkids.org).
She is also the co-founder of the Open Center for Autism
(www.oautism.org)
and the former ASPIE School.
Her work developing pioneering
educational programs for children with ASDs has been
featured in the New York Times, Redbook
Magazine, Autism Spectrum Quarterly and
on Japanese Public Television. Valerie’s memoir, Elijah's
Cup: A Family's Journey into the Community and Culture
of High-Functioning Autism and Asperger's Syndrome (Jessica
Kingsley, 2005) is the compelling story of the author's
experiences raising her autistic son, their involvement
together in the grassroots self-advocacy community, and
her own ultimate diagnosis with Asperger's syndrome.
The book offers readers an insider’s
history and celebration of autistic culture,
including profiles of individuals who are now believed
to have had autistic-like traits, such as visual artist,
Andy Warhol, comedian, Andy Kaufman, and physicist, Albert
Einstein.
Valerie has one forthcoming book written for
the autism community and continues to publish literary
non-fiction, including the recent narrative history, Clever
Maids: The Secret History of the Grimm Fairy Tales (Perseus,
2005).
For Valerie
Paradiz's biography, click
here.
Stephen Shore, MA
Stephen
Shore, MA is the Executive Director of Autism Spectrum
Disorder Consulting of Brookline Massachusetts. Diagnosed
with "Atypical Development with strong autistic
tendencies" Stephen Shore was viewed as "too
sick" to be treated on an outpatient basis and recommended
for institutionalization. Nonverbal until four
years of age, and with much help from his parents, teachers,
and others, Stephen Shore is now completing his doctoral
degree in special education at Boston University with
a focus on helping people on the autism spectrum develop
their capacities to the fullest extent possible.
In addition to working with children and talking about
life on the autism spectrum, Stephen presents and consults
internationally on adult issues pertinent to education,
relationships, employment, advocacy, and disclosure as
discussed in his book Beyond the Wall: Personal
Experiences with Autism and Asperger Syndrome, Ask
and Tell: Self-advocacy and Disclosure for People on
the Autism Spectrum, and the newly released Understanding
Autism for Dummies.
A board member of the Autism Society of America and president
emeritus of the Asperger’s Association of New England,
Stephen serves for the Board of Directors for Unlocking
Autism, the Autism Services Association of Massachusetts,
MAAP, and the College Internship Program.
For Stephen
Shore's biography, click
here.
Robert J. Krakow, Attorney at Law
Bob
Krakow is an attorney in private practice in New York
City. Bob started his legal career with the New York
Public Interest Research Group (NYPIRG), a consumer advocacy
organization. In the 1980's Bob was a prosecutor with
the New York Country District Attorney's office, serving
as Bureau Chief of the special narcotics prosecution
division. He founded his law firm in 1989, focusing on
the trial of civil and criminal cases, and specializes
in the representation of persons injured by exposure
to environmental toxins and vaccines.
Bob is committed
to working for individuals with disabilities. He is the
Chairman of the Board of Lifespire, Inc., a 55-year old
New York and New Jersey not-for-profit organization that
provides residential, day habilitation, occupational,
educational and medical programs and supports for more
than 5,000 developmentally disabled adults and children.
Bob is a Board member of the National Autism Association
and of Safeminds, organizations that promote the interests
of children with neurodevelopmental disorders, especially
in the area of scientific research. Most recently, Bob
co-founded A-CHAMP (Advocates for Children's Health Affected
by Mercury Poisoning), a national political organization
that advocates for children with neurodevelopmental disorders.
Bob lives in New York with his wife and two children.
For Bob
Krakow's biography, click
here. |