Manama: The opportunities and hurdles associated with autism will be outlined at a forum to be held in the Qatari capital Doha.

The forum and a report about autism will be presented at a conference to be organised by the World Innovation Summit for Health (Wish) on November 29-30.

The chances and obstacles will span the most recent developments across various sectors, including education, medicine, and policymaking, and conference participants will be given detailed action plans and recommendations that will allow them to adapt them to local contexts.

Dr Kerim Munir, Director of the Centre for Autism and Related Disorders at Boston Children’s Hospital and Associate Professor of Psychiatry and Pediatrics at Harvard Medical School, will chair the forum.

“The Autism Forum will present a global framework for action through evidence-based policy innovation, and promote the adoption of effective health and education interventions that emphasise inclusionary and family-oriented care,” he said.

“We will outline the opportunities and challenges in addressing autism and related developmental disorders through health and education interventions across different areas, including knowledge, training, services and support, and policy. We will also describe actions for policymakers to harness innovations and adapt successful policies to the local context,” he said.

The Autism Forum will provide case studies and diagrams outlining actions that must be taken across the health, education, and social sectors involved in addressing the condition.

Raising awareness and enhancing knowledge of the condition by understanding the cultural needs and barriers to best practices, for example, will facilitate treatment and the development of educational curricula.

“Autism is a big, messy, complicated subject, especially when you factor in the panic that’s been unleashed by the spread of false notions of a link between the condition and childhood vaccines,” Egbert Schillings, Wish CEO, said. “While those debates continue to rage in certain circles, those affected are dealing with a completely different set of problems, which is that there are not enough services and resources for autistic people and their families. The Wish Forum Report will outline concrete actions for policymakers to harness innovations in the field and adapt effective policies to their local context, so that individuals with autism and their families can get the support they need.”

The report will recommend that interdisciplinary training spans sectors, with providers, teachers, and families working together to ensure best treatment for the individual at the earliest stages possible.

In the home, modifications can be made with respect to services offered and equipment requested, along with counselling and education. It will underscore the importance of financing research, services to provide training, universal health-coverage options, and the evaluation of outcomes.

In the education sector, finance for infrastructure and the curation of curricula will be discussed in detail.

Dr Munir will be accompanied by scholars and doctors in the field, including Dr Muhammad Waqar Azeem, an inaugural Chair of Psychiatry for Sidra Medical and Research Centre, as well as research lead David Helm, Director of the Leadership Education in Neurodevelopmental and Related Disabilities at the Institute for Community Inclusion at Boston Children’s Hospital and the University of Massachusetts Boston.

The Wish 2016 Summit will feature seven research forums that highlight and address some of the world’s most pressing health care challenges.

In addition to Autism, the forums will generate interdisciplinary, evidence-based reports on topics including Healthy Populations, Precision Medicine, Economic Benefits of Investing in Health, Cardiovascular Disease, Accountable Care, and Behavioural Insights.

For the first time, Wish will also report on its ongoing impact locally and globally on issues previously highlighted at the summit, such as diabetes and patient safety.

The summit will feature innovation showcases from around the world that are shaping the design, delivery, and financing of care, as well as a cohort of young innovators; emerging health care leaders under the age of 30, whose contributions to global health deserve wider recognition.

Wish, an initiative of Qatar Foundation for Education, Science and Community Development (QF), has evolved into a key platform for the dissemination of health care innovation and best practices.