zozie
Well-Known Member
This reminds me of my experiences on my road to diagnosis 20+ years ago. The neuropsych I saw first, who I'm told was at the top of her field when it came to acquired brain injury (but was clearly clueless with developmental ones!), did a full day assessment with me, and then in her written report contradicted herself several times, had poor grammar, and after extensive discussion with me on some subjects, wrote all my concerns off as non-existent! Not even "unimportant" , but "non-existent! When she gave me the results (before I saw the report) she tried to tell me that I had no problems, and there were no problems with the way my brain was wired in the sense of being NT, not in the sense of "being different is ok)! ... not too terribly long after (I believe lass than a year) the learning disabilities person who did a second assessment could tell, before she was even half done, and without scoring anything, that there were very obvious differences between me and someone who was 'typical!! It was such a relief to know it was so obvious when someone who actually knew what they were looking at saw me!
When I finally saw (a third person) who could officially diagnose me, she was quite compassionate about how long it took me to get a diagnosis, and stated her regrets about it in the report!
Man, that first doc straight up erased you, and an expert at that. The gaslighting that goes on from doctors to patients just blows my mind. It's criminal that it's so prevalent.
And the thing is, there's so little agreement or communication between types of doctors. That it should be so obvious to a doc who dealt with learning delays and "non-existent" to a doc dealing with brain injuries, and then to finally be seen by an actual professional. My young PsyD seemed to feel really bad for me, too, just like your third person.