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New autism diagnoses shifting toward mild end of spectrum

AGXStarseed

Well-Known Member
(Not written by me)


Although the number of people diagnosed with autism is on the rise, the proportion with severe features has declined since 2000, according to a study of children in Western Australia1.

The findings, published 19 January in Autism Research, highlight a shift in the perception of autism. Until the 1990s, clinicians typically diagnosed the condition only when a child had significant intellectual disability or language problems.

“What a child with autism looks like has changed over time,” says lead investigator Andrew Whitehouse, head of autism research at Telethon Kids Institute in Subiaco, Western Australia. “We have greater awareness that autism isn’t just children with intellectual disability who show autistic symptoms; it can be far broader than that.”

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The findings reflect a growing appreciation of autism’s heterogeneity, says Santhosh Girirajan, assistant professor of biochemistry and molecular biology at Penn State University in University Park, who was not involved in the study. “We are going away from what we call a ‘classical’ definition of autism,” toward one that is more complex and variable, he says.


Trend tracking:
Whitehouse and his colleagues used the Western Australia Register for Autism Spectrum Disorders to find people diagnosed with autism between 2000 and 2006. They identified 1,252 individuals.

The version of the “Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders” (DSM) clinicians used at the time listed 12 criteria for the condition relating to social difficulties, communication problems, and restricted interests or repetitive behaviors.

But one aspect of the work is notable: Clinicians in Western Australia rated the severity of behaviors related to each of the criteria on a scale from 0 to 3, with 3 representing the greatest severity. By contrast, clinicians in most countries simply note whether a child meets each of the criteria.

“What the Australians do is unique,” says Eric Fombonne, professor of psychiatry at Oregon Health and Science University in Portland, who was not involved in the study. “The severity of symptoms is something that has been difficult to track in studies.”

The proportion of people with autism rated as a ‘3’ on three or more of the diagnostic criteria dropped from 16 percent in 2000 to 1.6 percent in 2006, the researchers found. Over the same period, the proportion of people rated as a ‘0’ on three or more criteria rose from 58.5 percent to 86.6 percent.


Changing criteria:
The researchers saw shifts in severity across all types of autism features, including social difficulties, communication problems, restricted interests and repetitive behaviors. These shifts did not vary significantly by the age or sex of the individuals.

Increased overall awareness of autism may contribute to the diminishing proportion of severe cases, Whitehouse says. Government policies that incentivize parents to seek a diagnosis in order to access services may also be a factor, he says.

Studies suggest that changes in diagnostic criteria have played a role in the overall uptick in autism prevalence. But the new study controlled for this factor, because there was no change in criteria over the six years the study covers.

“What shocked me the most is that these changes occurred many years after the last change in the DSM,” Whitehouse says. “So it actually shows us that, as clinicians, our interpretation of diagnostic criteria is a living and evolving thing.”

The study covers a relatively short time period, and it is unclear whether the results generalize to other parts of the world. “But the fact that they still found this is telling you something,” Fombonne says.

Replicating the findings in a larger population might help researchers pinpoint which diagnostic criteria show the greatest shifts in severity — and in doing so, better define the core features of autism.


Source: New autism diagnoses shifting toward mild end of spectrum | Spectrum
 
Interesting. Maybe it isbecause they are realizing that a whole lot of "normal" and "mild" auties are killing themselves? Yeah, maybe we do need help actually.
 
It's that science is slowly, although painfully beginning to catch up on the reality that so many of us are functional to the point of being "under the radar" like myself.

That many of us have adapted whether we knew of our autism or not by masking our behavior in an attempt at "social self-survival". Another thing that keeps us from being exposed as neurodiverse. Where the NT world just sees us an annoying people and little else.

We struggle through life, but on a level where few if any know, or care. Where perhaps most people just think we have bad attitudes and little else. Which may well be a substantial portion of why I began to figure this all out at 55 instead of 5 years of age. Ironic to think my parents knew there was something "different" about me. Yet the doctors pronounced me as "fine", some 20 years before Dr. Asperger's research was adopted in the mainstream medical community.

Though I do see one ominous issue in all of this. Something that already occurs. Modern welfare states, whether Britain's NHS or the US "Affordable Care Act" keen to control costs formulate policies regarding autism designed to marginalize our situation so they can't be subsidized in whole or in part.

My life remains a struggle on certain levels, though in my own case I've never given a thought to anyone subsidizing my existence as an adult. Though it's chilling to think that politicians and insurers are bent on denying me any real help at all. That in their eyes I have no "struggle". Just a bad attitude. o_O
 
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For me, it was obvious I was disabled since 14 but no one knew why. I was kicked around by the shrinks to such an extend that their Dxs eventually started to contradict one another. It truly was not even possible for me to have every *****ing dx they gave me and yet they kept missing autism. One even had "Infantile Personaltiy Disorder". Does that even exist??????

I have less respect for them after what I endured. If I had known I had this, I wold not have gotten so beat up by them and by people in real like, like partners.

BUT I am VERY HAPPY TO KNOW NOW! Screw the water under the bridge. It could have been more years of not knowing and wondering why everyone hated me though I tried like heck to fit in.

NOW I am 100% happier because I don't try to fit in. If I go to church, it is with my hat and stuff. If I need something, I just go up and ask and if they say no, I don't care. I have a BEAUTIFUL buffer around me now, my autism, into which I can FALL ANY TIME I LIKE.

Examp[le......I was at chuirch and everyone got up for commmunion and I could not because of my food allergies and all and before I would be so self conscious like they are looking at me. Well, I just closed my eyes and fell down my very own rabbit hole and stayed there till the music stopped. It was AWESOME! I was comforted and alone but still with my church family.

Yes, I am now the person in the back that I USED TO wonder about. Yeah, that's me! So bl***dy what? :-)
 

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