This does not seem like autism at all. Completely different diagnostic criteria and description |
| I’m just irritated that I keep seeing people online saying his son is non-verbal. It’s a very confusing name for the diagnosis and people keep misunderstanding. |
You are full of it. What an ignorant, useless post that is just your attempting at sharing your hateful politics. My kid was diagnosed with this a long time ago. It was a very accurate representation of my child and their issues. It is different from autism. I've heard they've stopped using this term but I think it is a mistake. It is not odd in any way. |
No, it is quite different and the issues with learning are different. It is not more specific. It is different. |
It was described to me by an evaluator years ago as basically equivalent to Asperger’s. I always thought it sounded like a fit for my son, who has social communication difficulties, especially with pragmatically, but is highly gifted verbally. (He had a pdd dx, now ASD). It’s a very confusing name though. |
Super interesting, thanks! |
|
It’s a really common autism profile to have a verbal, high IQ, but physically clumsy kid. My kid is ASD + DCD and could easily fit the criteria for NVLD if someone tried to apply that label. I don’t really care, but given that the vast majority of kids with “anxiety, ADHD and social communication issues” will be dx as autism these days, it seems purposeful to get the NVLD label and not autism. |
Interesting. I also have a kid with TS, but no NVLD. |
Agree on the name. I also had that misconception when I first heard about his son. |
If you have a practitioner who is familiar with both, it’s actually quite easy to discern. And I’m not sure how it could be a “purposeful” diagnosis. I didn’t pick it. |
It’s not confusing. It’s a learning disorder that mostly spares language abilities. The fact that people who don’t know anything about anything think that NVLD means that the person who has it is “nonverbal” is—well, their problem. Maybe they don’t know much. |
| People are confusing non verbal ASD and NVLD. completely different. |
NVLD isn’t a DSM diagnosis. I’d be pretty skeptical of people claiming they can distinguish it from autism since there are no fixed diagnostic criteria for NVLD. |
I’ve never heard of this until this week, but I found it fascinating. As a kid I was always verbally advanced (I could read at 18 months, perfect SAT verbal scores, was on spelling bees on tv, etc) and yet I could not tie my shoes, button/unbutton my pants in grade school. Did not truly learn left from right til late teens. Could only drive a few places that I knew the route very well. This made me wonder if there was an explanation for my deficits, although to be honest I don’t fit the full nvld profile, so maybe I’ll never know
|