Most readers
of this blog are from the US, but in much of the rest of the world the
diagnosis of autism is very much rarer.
Why is that? And does it matter?
I came
across a perfect example of this recently.
A friend who lived in the Netherlands (north Europe), just relocated, back
to the south of Europe. In the
Netherlands, his daughter was diagnosed with autism; the father, being a native
of southern Europe, did not like this at all.
“On what basis do you say this?”, he asked the psychiatrist. The psychiatrist would not discuss the
diagnosis, other than to say that according to the American DSM, his daughter
has autism.
A few months
later, the father takes his daughter for an assessment back home in southern
Europe. There he was told that it was
nonsense to say the girl is autistic, she just has some mild obsessive
compulsive behaviour. The father now
feels much better, the daughter feels no worse.
We were discussing
my Polypill for autism and comparing symptoms.
Difficulty with expressive/receptive language? No. Stereotypy? No. Did his daughter have
anxiety? No. Was she ever hyperactive?
No. Trouble with sleep? No. Sensory issues? No.
And
according to the US DSM this counts as autism?
It is not
just autism that appears over-diagnosed, just look at ADHD. In the US 7% of children have been told they
have Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder.
In the UK it is about 2.5%.
Some kids
displaying ADHD have a biological dysfunction, but plenty of others have
a purely behavioral condition. In those cases, throw out
the PlayStation, Xbox, iPad, smart phone and disconnect from Facebook and then
say farewell to ADHD.
Why Over-Diagnose?
Many years
ago, our speech therapist told us that it was all about money. In the US, if you get an autism diagnosis you
get free services, so of course the parents want the diagnosis and so do the
providers of the services. At the time,
I was very sceptical, but now I think she has hit the nail on the head.
In countries
where there are no free services and also attitudes to special needs kids are not so
nice, the last thing a parent wants is an autism diagnosis. So unless the kid really is deeply affected,
he will never get an autism diagnosis.
This is a much better approach in my opinion.
Why is Over-Diagnosis Bad?
It is only a
bad thing if you want to treat autism and perhaps, one day, even “cure”
it. By mixing in all sorts of different,
often much milder, conditions you just end up will a group of people who share
a pervasive development disorder of any origin, and ranging from very mild to
very severe. It tells you nothing else.
Worse still,
sometimes the origin is known. For
example, if the child has a diagnosed immune disorder, but also has some odd
behaviours, why call it autism? Call it
by the name of the immune disorder and treat the child for the immune disorder.
Medical
science can only find treatments that work for a specific biological dysfunction,
and only if they are proved to be effective in lengthy clinical trials. Clinical trials for autism are usually based
on selecting participants based on diagnosis using DSM (itself based on
behaviour).
To-date
pretty much every advanced clinical trial for autism has failed. Should this come as a surprise? Not at all.
All the test subjects needed to be suffering from the same biological
(not behavioural) disorder.
You could
select participants by DSM and then screen them all by an intelligent scale,
like CARS (Childhood Autism Rating Scale), then just take the kids with more
serious issues. The clever next step is
to screen the participants for biomarkers, of what target of the treatment
is. The only trial I see doing this is
Curemark with CM-AT. The wizz kids from
MIT do not do it, and their trials fail.
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