I think you've miscounted your generations. |
I don't think so. I have adult kids also so I have been parenting for 30 years. But regardless, my point remains. |
Oh, I understand what you’re asking now. They say the prevalence in boys is 43.0 per 1,000, which is 1 in 23. For girls, the prevalence is 11.4 per 1,000, which is 1 in 88. |
Agree. OCD and also extreme anxiety. I remember very well the “atypical” kids from my youth that would likely have had a diagnosis now. But everything is just so much more prevalent now. I’ve seen some studies indicating that gut biome may be related to some of these conditions — and I think we e largely trashed our gut biome in this country through things like antibiotics in the food and water supply and weird additives in our food. I feel like science is about 20-50 years away from having a much better understanding of brain development—right now, we diagnos and treat pretty much entirely on symptoms and know almost nothing about causes. |
I think they are comparable. There are doctors who believe these are all related to autoimmune disorders. Kids with ADHD and autism are much more likely to get PANS/PANDAS. There’s a high correlation between Celiac and ADHD, etc. |
| The tone of this whole thread is really disappointing, coming from someone who was recently diagnosed as a 38 year old successful adult. Having a diagnosis and knowing why the world has always seemed so different for me means the world. But my “quirks” are precisely why I was very good at school and now have a very good job. There’s some argument that parts of autism were evolutionary advantageous. No, I don’t want a cure. I am happy diagnosis rates are going up so that kids don’t have to wait until nearly 40 to understand themselves. Acceptance and changing norms is absolutely what’s needed. Let kids unmask. |
+1 although I think we will figure it out sooner! |
Following the rules isn't "masking". Having a public face and a private face isn't masking either. It's getting along in the world. |
Yea, no. These “rules” were set by one type of person. Masking is exhausting and leads to depression and anxiety. Forcing conformity for ND people is exactly the issue. |
🤣🤣🤣 |
+100 |
I’m not sure what “forcing conformity” means here. It’s impossible to force the world to not find my kid different. Anyway, at 1/25 boys diagnosed now (and how many more with ADHD?) it’s pretty clear that we are pathologizing a normal personality variant. The problem is that there is little benefit in this rush to label, because there are no real treatments for autism. |
That's so great for you, person who is highly successful and has a great life and now has the benefit of a simple label to describe why you've always felt a little different. My 11 year old has significant, significant challenges with his high functioning ASD, was thrown out of multiple preschools, has never had a friend, and while he's highly gifted, lacks the intuit to figure out how to play the game of school to get decent marks. I'd like a cure or at least some kind of viable treatment. PP -- perhaps your anecdote is exactly why the diagnosis has gotten too broad. Your think your need to "understand yourself" should come at the expense of my kid having access to treatment so that maybe he can live independently one day. |
I also think they'll eventually find that a least a large subset of ASD is inflammatory. PANDAS-caused ASD behavior is clearly inflammatory (and to an outsider, the behavior in that transient period looks identical to ASD). And small scale studies of kids diagnosed with ASD show statistically significant improvement in symptoms on steroid treatment (regression once the steroids inevitably have to be stopped). |
I’m not sure what’s worse: this kind of pseudoscience bullshit pushing harmful treatments (steroids are no joke); or the adult “autism” community interfering with the development and deployment of effective therapies; or the online self-diagnoses “autism community” blathering on about masking. FWIW my DS supposedly on the spectrum is exactly like his dad, cousin and uncle. It’s not inflammation or a virus. |