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Kids With Special Needs and Disabilities
Reply to "Does anyone feel like the current DSM needs urgent updating? "
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Yup, OP, I am totally with you. Wish we could get the Aspergers diagnosis back - give it a new name if you must! We have a kid without an ASD diagnosis. But outwardly seems super Aspergers. The whole thing is just so useless now. Even if we got an ASD diagnosis, I don't understand how that is useful at all - to provide that information to teachers or friends. Because ASD is so meaninglessly broad. I also recognize the absurd focus on diagnosing basically 1 out of every 10 boys as ASD - essentially, every quicky, socially challenged, math loving boy, of which there's one in every class - is incredibly distracting to real issue of what we think of as traditional autism. Those are the kids who need tremendous help and resources, and research. I also hate that we've pathologized boys being socially quirky and into math. Why does that require a diagnosis?? Why isn't that just a personality type? (which incidentally, is the "diagnosis" DS got after a neuropsych. She said sometimes it's okay to just label his social oddities as personality, when they don't otherwise meet the full ASD diagnosis). [/quote] I also agree about the need for a specific category for those who need the most support. I have an older teen who does not have a diagnosis. He also has a quirky personality, but before the pandemic, an ASD diagnosis had not entered my mind. However, since the pandemic, he has been exhibiting characteristics strongly consistent with A.1-A.3 of the DSM (less so with the B categories). I have been wondering whether, for some younger people, pandemic isolation has caused profound personality changes so that, while not exactly meeting the criteria for ASD, they need similar supports to address social and communication deficits. [/quote] I think there definitely is. There was an article in the post a few months ago describing that researches were seeing brain changes similar to those who have survived trauma. And no, I don't think it is due to masks. While they were annoying, I'm pretty sure it was the social isolation that did it. With treatment, these conditions are a result of the pandemic. True ASD kids were most likely having issues before, during, and after the pandemic.[/quote]
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