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By YVETTE C. HAMMETT, The Tampa Tribune

Published: March 5, 2008

Updated: 03/03/2008 07:56 pm

VALRICO - Ten years ago, when VanCleve was a little guy, he rarely

spoke. Trips to Disney World or fairs were out of the question. He had

no social skills and little awareness of the world around him.

Today, a 17-year-old with great grades and a love for animals, the high

school sophomore's life has changed immensely, said his mother,

VanCleve.

She credits his doctor, who views and treats his autism as a disease

rather than a developmental disorder, and his involvement with FFA and 4-H.

VanCleve chatted recently about the care and work that went in to

preparing his 270-pound pig, Rizzo, for the Florida Strawberry Festival,

which opened Thursday in Plant City.

" I've been showing for a couple of years now at Zephyrhills shows, " he

explained, using equine shampoo to bathe his large pink-and-black pig.

" She does bite me sometimes. "

Working with 4-H and FFA at Durant High School, VanCleve's social skills

and sense of responsibility have skyrocketed, his mom said.

" These programs have been wonderful for him, " VanCleve said. " He's

learned social skills, responsibility and routine, and the kids in FFA

have really taken to him. "

VanCleve's rooster, ducks and brown eggs won numerous awards at

the Florida State Fair last month. But it all started with goats that

have played a role in his physical and mental progress over the years.

Renowned pediatrician J. Goldberg of Tarzana, Calif., performed

25 blood tests on VanCleve, then took him off bovine milk products.

Within 24 hours, he began to speak without prompting - a first.

" I was a believer from that point on, " his mother said, standing a few

feet away from her husband, Jim and VanCleve's twin, , as

they helped prepare Rizzo for her bath last week.

The VanCleves put on goat's milk and limited his diet in other

ways as Goldberg recommended - no whole wheat or gluten, almost no red

or yellow dyes.

Today, the family has four milk goats and regularly makes goat cheese

and goat-milk ice cream.

Goldberg also has tweaked the medicines the teen takes, shooting for

optimum progress.

Goldberg said he believes most children diagnosed as autistic suffer

only some of the symptoms of autism but instead have an immune

deficiency that childhood immunizations and the mercury in them can trigger.

According to his paper, " The Myth of Autism, " he also believes that

children treated for what he calls neuro immune dysfunction can, with

proper treatment, make steady progress and become functioning members of

society.

" He deals with one problem at a time, " VanCleve said of Goldberg.

She said that's not the route most pediatricians take in treating autism.

" If you try to treat for too many things at once, you don't know what's

really working. Dr. Goldberg uses simple medicine, and it works. I want

to spread the word. "

" The Myth of Autism " can be found on Goldberg's Web site, http://nids.net/.

Reporter Yvette C. Hammett can be reached at (813) 657-4532 or at

yhammett@...

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