Anonymous wrote:Sorry to be obtuse, but I still don't see how emotional sensitivity, ADHD, and expressive speech delay equal even high functioning autism. I've read so many descriptions and it doesn't match up.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thank you. I will follow up with dev ped. I think it'll be helpful for the ADHD. I really don't see the ASD and neither do any of the other clinicians. DS is very social. Always going up to people, laughing, smiling, singing, etc. He is also quite silly and kind of a jokester. He doesn't hyperfocus on anything (the opposite he can't pay attention to anything for more than 10 seconds). The only behavior I can see that is concerning is that he does have extreme tantrums if he doesn't get his way.Anonymous wrote:You wouldn’t do a neuropsych until 7. She’s suggesting you test for autism. Get on the waiting lists for a dev ped.
Honestly this describes my now 4 yr old exactly and everyone from the ped to the speech therapists said this is pretty likely to be evaluated as ASD. You don’t have to hyperfocus, line things up, repeat, etc. We’ve also been told 4 is too young for an ADHD diagnosis, too. Good luck - it’s very time consuming and frustrating to get answers and try to make progress
It describes my 3 year old ASD kid too. He probably has ADHD too but dev ped says it’s too young to diagnose.
Sorry to be obtuse, but I still don't see how emotional sensitivity, ADHD, and expressive speech delay equal even high functioning autism. I've read so many descriptions and it doesn't match up.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thank you. I will follow up with dev ped. I think it'll be helpful for the ADHD. I really don't see the ASD and neither do any of the other clinicians. DS is very social. Always going up to people, laughing, smiling, singing, etc. He is also quite silly and kind of a jokester. He doesn't hyperfocus on anything (the opposite he can't pay attention to anything for more than 10 seconds). The only behavior I can see that is concerning is that he does have extreme tantrums if he doesn't get his way.Anonymous wrote:You wouldn’t do a neuropsych until 7. She’s suggesting you test for autism. Get on the waiting lists for a dev ped.
Honestly this describes my now 4 yr old exactly and everyone from the ped to the speech therapists said this is pretty likely to be evaluated as ASD. You don’t have to hyperfocus, line things up, repeat, etc. We’ve also been told 4 is too young for an ADHD diagnosis, too. Good luck - it’s very time consuming and frustrating to get answers and try to make progress
It describes my 3 year old ASD kid too. He probably has ADHD too but dev ped says it’s too young to diagnose.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thank you. I will follow up with dev ped. I think it'll be helpful for the ADHD. I really don't see the ASD and neither do any of the other clinicians. DS is very social. Always going up to people, laughing, smiling, singing, etc. He is also quite silly and kind of a jokester. He doesn't hyperfocus on anything (the opposite he can't pay attention to anything for more than 10 seconds). The only behavior I can see that is concerning is that he does have extreme tantrums if he doesn't get his way.Anonymous wrote:You wouldn’t do a neuropsych until 7. She’s suggesting you test for autism. Get on the waiting lists for a dev ped.
Honestly this describes my now 4 yr old exactly and everyone from the ped to the speech therapists said this is pretty likely to be evaluated as ASD. You don’t have to hyperfocus, line things up, repeat, etc. We’ve also been told 4 is too young for an ADHD diagnosis, too. Good luck - it’s very time consuming and frustrating to get answers and try to make progress
I don't think then I understand what ASD is. Can you elaborate?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thank you. I will follow up with dev ped. I think it'll be helpful for the ADHD. I really don't see the ASD and neither do any of the other clinicians. DS is very social. Always going up to people, laughing, smiling, singing, etc. He is also quite silly and kind of a jokester. He doesn't hyperfocus on anything (the opposite he can't pay attention to anything for more than 10 seconds). The only behavior I can see that is concerning is that he does have extreme tantrums if he doesn't get his way.Anonymous wrote:You wouldn’t do a neuropsych until 7. She’s suggesting you test for autism. Get on the waiting lists for a dev ped.
Honestly this describes my now 4 yr old exactly and everyone from the ped to the speech therapists said this is pretty likely to be evaluated as ASD. You don’t have to hyperfocus, line things up, repeat, etc. We’ve also been told 4 is too young for an ADHD diagnosis, too. Good luck - it’s very time consuming and frustrating to get answers and try to make progress
Anonymous wrote:Thank you. I will follow up with dev ped. I think it'll be helpful for the ADHD. I really don't see the ASD and neither do any of the other clinicians. DS is very social. Always going up to people, laughing, smiling, singing, etc. He is also quite silly and kind of a jokester. He doesn't hyperfocus on anything (the opposite he can't pay attention to anything for more than 10 seconds). The only behavior I can see that is concerning is that he does have extreme tantrums if he doesn't get his way.Anonymous wrote:You wouldn’t do a neuropsych until 7. She’s suggesting you test for autism. Get on the waiting lists for a dev ped.
Thank you. I will follow up with dev ped. I think it'll be helpful for the ADHD. I really don't see the ASD and neither do any of the other clinicians. DS is very social. Always going up to people, laughing, smiling, singing, etc. He is also quite silly and kind of a jokester. He doesn't hyperfocus on anything (the opposite he can't pay attention to anything for more than 10 seconds). The only behavior I can see that is concerning is that he does have extreme tantrums if he doesn't get his way.Anonymous wrote:You wouldn’t do a neuropsych until 7. She’s suggesting you test for autism. Get on the waiting lists for a dev ped.
Thank you! That makes way more sense. I will ask for a referral.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is what the clinical speech therapist said today. I was surprised.Anonymous wrote:Neuropsych eval for a 2-year-old?
Maybe she meant get him checked by a developmental ped. That would make more sense and couldn’t hurt.
Anonymous wrote:This is what the clinical speech therapist said today. I was surprised.Anonymous wrote:Neuropsych eval for a 2-year-old?
This is what the clinical speech therapist said today. I was surprised.Anonymous wrote:Neuropsych eval for a 2-year-old?