Rochester Hills — Wrangling three children with autism consumed Dana Paduchowski’s days in a chaotic swirl, her weeks dissolving into a blur of routines and meltdowns. When the house finally quieted at night, the mother would stay awake for hours scouring the internet for a magic treatment that didn’t exist.

Instead of finding answers, Paduchowski said, she constantly stumbled into expensive “rabbit holes of broken promises.”

Over the past few years, Paduchowski estimates she and her husband have spent at least $30,000 on unproven alternative treatments for her children: An intravenous therapy to remove heavy metals from her son’s body. A clinic with hyperbaric oxygen chambers. Supplements, new diets and naturopathicdoctors. While some helped in small ways, others made no difference. In

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