PARENTS FIGHT to DIAGNOSE WHILST your CHILDREN ARE CHILDREN! !
RiverSong
Online Community Member Posts: 3 Connected
Hi I'm River Song,
At 29, I'm finally going through the assessment stage for diagnosis and have 3 different ones on the table. High Functioning Autism, ADHD, and Sensory Processing Disorder. Going for further testing to figure out which ones are going to be most helpful for my life.
At 29, I'm finally going through the assessment stage for diagnosis and have 3 different ones on the table. High Functioning Autism, ADHD, and Sensory Processing Disorder. Going for further testing to figure out which ones are going to be most helpful for my life.
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Unfortunately I dont think too much was known re ASD when my parents were often getting called up to the school for talks with the headmistress because of their unruly child.
But yes I would say to any parent now, fight tooth and nail, and insist on that diagnosis.0 -
I agree I was diagnosed with it as a child and they said I was lucky as it is harder to get diagnosed as an adult.
I don’t really know what a diagnosis does aside from confirm what you have, though. It doesn’t unlock access to special treatment or medicines, at least it didn’t for me.0 -
HI and welcome,I'm one of the community champions here on scope.My daughter was diagnosed with ASD when she was 17, she's 19 now. Did it make any difference to her..... no, absolutely not. Although a diagnosis does help you know what's wrong, it doesn't help with anything else. You're still the same person you were before the diagnosis.0
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I guess it just helps to have the diagnosis while you're still a kid just so you know what the problem with you is, and can tell others. Not leaving them searching for 'labels' such as unruly etc while a child, progressing to slightly more aggressive stuff as you grow up such as 'weird', 'not normal' 'alcoholic' 'lesbian' etc. Which in turn leads to them just blanking you out from society/community.
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Welcome to the community @RiverSong, great to have you with us! How are you doing?
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Welcome to the community @RiverSong. What are your hobbies and interests?0
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I was diagnosed as having Auditory Processing Disorder in my late 40s, which explained my life long issues. I was asked to help the UK Medical Research Council regarding their 2004-2009 Auditory Processing Disorder research program. They asked me to set up and run a a support organisation for those diagnosd as having auditory processing disorder. during this time i discovered that i could read research papers, which the researchers often sent me.RiverSong said:Hi I'm River Song,
At 29, I'm finally going through the assessment stage for diagnosis and have 3 different ones on the table. High Functioning Autism, ADHD, and Sensory Processing Disorder. Going for further testing to figure out which ones are going to be most helpful for my life.
since then i have compiled many research paper collections relating to many invisible disabilities including autism, ADHD and Sensory Processing Disorder. They are based at PubMed whicb allows you to create your own online research paper collections. You may find these three research paper collections of some interest.
Autism
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/myncbi/1v9jzpUc5t6/collections/10371460/public/
Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD)
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/myncbi/1v9jzpUc5t6/collections/10362498/public/
Sensory Processing Disorder (SPD)
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/myncbi/1v9jzpUc5t6/collections/10634081/public/
I hope you find them useful
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