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First-Ever Internet Autism PSA Aims to Unite Online Users

The Early Intervention Network has launched the Red Flags of Autism online public service announcement campaign that allows Internet users worldwide to play a role in raising awareness of autism's earliest warning signs during national Autism Awareness month in April. Jayne Lytel, executive director of the Early Intervention Network, said an offline campaign complements the online PSA and includes displays featured throughout the DC Metro and bus sytem and volunteers handing out red flags at designated D.C. Metro stops. Lytel and her son, who recovered from autism, plan to pass out red flags from 8 am to 9 am at Metro Center on April 1 to kick off the campaign.

Washington, DC (PRWEB) March 17, 2008 -- The Early Intervention Network has launched an online public service announcement campaign that allows Internet users worldwide to play a role in raising awareness of autism's earliest warning signs during national Autism Awareness month in April.

"Parents need to recognize that autism is treatable if caught early," said Jayne Lytel, who founded and heads The Early Intervention Network. "While not all children will recover, the earlier children get into treatment the better off they'll be," said Lytel, author of Act Early Against Autism, a new book from Penguin that blends memoir and prescriptive advice on autism spectrum disorders.

I'm 24 months and I don't pretend.
The PSA campaign, a partnership between the intervention network and the D.C. Department of Human Services' Early Care and Education Administration, offers users five ways to make a difference in the lives of children afflicted by autism, a brain disorder that now strikes one child out of every 150 in the United States, alone. Autism, which can be diagnosed before the age of 2 years, robs a child's ability to communicate, make friends and find joy.

The No. 1 way users can make a difference is to get the word out about autism's earliest warning signs by viewing a YouTube video that features pictures of infants and toddlers holding red flags. "We hope to be the No. 1 watched video on autism's early warning signs next month," Lytel said. "Yesterday, we were ranked No. 18." Each picture in the YouTube slideshow is accompanied by a message that identifies an early warning sign. For example, the message displayed near the picture of a 1-year-old reads: "I'm 12 months old and I don't notice you." For a 6 month old, the message says, "I'm 6 months old and I don't smile back at you," and the message that accompanies a 2-year-old reads, "I'm 24 months and I don't pretend."

A link to the YouTube video is on the homepage of the Network's site at the Early Intervention Network or can be accessed directly on the network's nonprofit channel at www.youtube.com/actearlyagainstautis.

The online campaign complements a print PSA campaign that will run in the subway and bus system in the District of Columbia, Maryland and Northern Virginia. The messages featured in the online campaign mirror those displayed throughout the greater D.C. bus and subway system.

During the first week of April, volunteers will distribute 2,000 red flags and postcards at designated Metro stops, including Metro Center and Capitol South. Lytel and her son, Leo, plan to be at Metro Center between 8 a.m. and 9 a.m. on April 1 to kick off the campaign. Both will be handing out red flags and postcards to passerbys.

The red flags direct the general public to visit the Early Intervention Network's site to locate federally funded services that help parents with paying for the cost of evaluations and treatment. The campaign also encourages the public to take action by purchasing a poster on autism's early warning signs for their child care center or pediatrician's office at The Early Intervention Network's Autism Awareness Boutique. The Network hopes to distribute the posters in child care and pediatricians' offices across the country.

About the Early Intervention Network:
The Early Intervention Network promotes policies and practices that heighten awareness of autism's earliest warning signs and expedite services for newly diagnosed children. Lytel founded the network in 2007 to give other parents the gift of early intervention, which made all the difference for her own son.

About Jayne Lytel:
Jayne Lytel founded and heads The Early Intervention Network: Enabling Families to Act Early Against Autism. In her memoir and practical advice book, Act Early Against Autism, Lytel writes about her experience "recovering" her son from autism, a journey that began in September 2001.

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CONTACT INFORMATION
Jayne Lytel
The Early Intervention Network
202-905-4162
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