The first scientific study designed to answer this question, which was reported in the December 9, 1999, New England Journal of Medicine, did not find that a single intravenous dose of synthetic secretin helped autistic children perform better on a battery of behavioral tests, including the Autism Behavior Checklist, than a saline injection did (Psychiatric News, February 4, 2000). Three subsequent scientific studies published on secretin, either in the synthetic form or in the porcine form (which is what had been used in most cases of autistic children receiving secretin), likewise failed to find a positive effect. And now a fifth one also has produced negative results. It was conducted by Thomas Owley, M.D., an assistant professor of child and adolescent psychiatry at the University of Chicago, and his colleagues and is reported in the November Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry.