Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No one said the symptoms don't exist. I said the diagnostic category doesn't exist in the DSM-V. (Which you just said.)
MERLD is like Asperger's. It's a handy label to describe a group of symptoms for lay people, but as a diagnostic category in the US, it is not correct. It is not used because it was not functionally useful.
The term Asperger's is helpful as it describes a grouping of kids with very specific traits, including being highly verbal. MERLD is helpful as it means a child has both expressive and receptive language issues. It is very functionally useful, just maybe not to your child specifically.
Anonymous wrote:No one said the symptoms don't exist. I said the diagnostic category doesn't exist in the DSM-V. (Which you just said.)
MERLD is like Asperger's. It's a handy label to describe a group of symptoms for lay people, but as a diagnostic category in the US, it is not correct. It is not used because it was not functionally useful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: I think it depends which professional you talk to. I have posted before. My son was diagnosed with MERLD and I was pretty much told down the line that some professionals use MERLD and ASD interchangeably because the interventions are the same. Often you can get more services in school with the ASD diagnosis. In the end it doesn't matter. Your goal is to get as much intervention as possible tailored to your child's individual needs and both that varies more from child to child than from ASD to MERLD.
The most interesting thing I was told was brain scans of those with ASD and MERLD were similar, but I didn't do a lit search so not sure if that was anecdotal.
The DSM is ever evolving. They used to have Aspergers as a separate diagnosis too. Many years ago I believe I read homosexuality was considered a disorder as per DSM early editions. A group of professionals meet and make adjustments. It is not carved in stone.
Of course, they are similar. Lots of kids with ASD have receptive language disorder and expressive language disorder as part of their ASD. That is going to look exactly like the language deficits that kids with MERLD have.
Anonymous wrote:Crazy-obsessed MERLD parent,
No one, absolutely NO ONE said MERLD "doesn't exist." Simply that it's no longer in the current DSM and is covered by these diagnoses:
--Language Impairment
--Late Language Emergence
--Specific Language Impairment
--Social Communication Disorder
--Voice Disorder
The ICD is different and yes, relates to medical coding. You get a diagnosis from the DSM and a billing code from the ICD.
Anonymous wrote: I think it depends which professional you talk to. I have posted before. My son was diagnosed with MERLD and I was pretty much told down the line that some professionals use MERLD and ASD interchangeably because the interventions are the same. Often you can get more services in school with the ASD diagnosis. In the end it doesn't matter. Your goal is to get as much intervention as possible tailored to your child's individual needs and both that varies more from child to child than from ASD to MERLD.
The most interesting thing I was told was brain scans of those with ASD and MERLD were similar, but I didn't do a lit search so not sure if that was anecdotal.
The DSM is ever evolving. They used to have Aspergers as a separate diagnosis too. Many years ago I believe I read homosexuality was considered a disorder as per DSM early editions. A group of professionals meet and make adjustments. It is not carved in stone.
Anonymous wrote:I agree that it might vary by type of professional. DS, who is very verbal but has difficulty with pragmatics and non literal language, was diagnosed with ASD by a neuropsych and MERLD by a SLP. The ASD is clearly the correct diagnosis.
Anonymous wrote:Crazy-obsessed MERLD parent,
No one, absolutely NO ONE said MERLD "doesn't exist." Simply that it's no longer in the current DSM and is covered by these diagnoses:
--Language Impairment
--Late Language Emergence
--Specific Language Impairment
--Social Communication Disorder
--Voice Disorder
The ICD is different and yes, relates to medical coding. You get a diagnosis from the DSM and a billing code from the ICD.
Anonymous wrote: I think it depends which professional you talk to. I have posted before. My son was diagnosed with MERLD and I was pretty much told down the line that some professionals use MERLD and ASD interchangeably because the interventions are the same. Often you can get more services in school with the ASD diagnosis. In the end it doesn't matter. Your goal is to get as much intervention as possible tailored to your child's individual needs and both that varies more from child to child than from ASD to MERLD.
The most interesting thing I was told was brain scans of those with ASD and MERLD were similar, but I didn't do a lit search so not sure if that was anecdotal.
The DSM is ever evolving. They used to have Aspergers as a separate diagnosis too. Many years ago I believe I read homosexuality was considered a disorder as per DSM early editions. A group of professionals meet and make adjustments. It is not carved in stone.
Anonymous wrote:There's been some argument about this category in recent days, but I hope that this post will lay the issue to rest, rather stir up more trouble. DSM V deleted MERLD as a diagnosistic category, but it lives on in another important place - ICD-10. ICD-10 is the International Classification of Diseases, 10th edition, and it's where those code numbers on your medical invoices come from. You can't get an insurance reimbursement for treatment without one of those codes, so users of DSM-V have to translate their diagnosis into an ICD-10 diagnosis . So it turns out that F80.2 is Mixed Receptive-Expressive Language Disorder.
http://www.icd10data.com/ICD10CM/Codes/F01-F99/F80-F89/F80-/F80.2
I trust this will lay this particular issue to rest, and we will have one less dumb thing to argue about.