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Friday 16 April 2021

Autism – Awareness and Acceptance

 


There is a lot of talk this month about autism awareness and acceptance.  Some people get very excited about this and some people get quite upset about it; it seems to depend on how old the person with autism is and how severely impaired, if at all, they are. 

For much of the confusion we have to thank the psychiatrists who keep broadening the definition of autism and their lack of using one of the standard ratings scales to tell people just how autistic they actually are (like on a scale of 1 to 100, not 1 to 3).  The result is a widespread misunderstanding of what the word autism means.  Nowadays it means very little.

I think that bubbles better represent autism than pieces of a puzzle.

People with any difference, from mild to severe, tend to live in their own little bubble; but bubbles do have a nasty habit of bursting and then a different reality may present itself. Also, if you live in a bubble you generally only hear people with similar opinions to your own – the social media echo chamber effect.

Monty, aged nearly 18, continues to live happily in his enchanted bubble. School is online currently, but hopefully back to normal again next week. Online school is pretty good because his assistant comes to our house.  Easter was celebrated and a couple of girls from his class came to hunt for chocolate eggs with him in our garden.

We visited some of Monty’s distant relatives who are usually looking after their grandson with severe non-verbal autism.  The boy has been out of school for a year, because his special school closed due to Covid.  He lives in a very different kind of bubble. Grandad was wondering where the boy will be in 10 years’ time, presuming it likely to be in an institution, a very different kind of bubble and not an attractive one.

On Sunday we were invited by friends for lunch beside the river. Their adult children do not come, likewise our adult son, they all have better things to do.  Monty was invited and we are beyond the stage where you would leave him at home, out of sight, with a babysitter. Our friends are aware that Monty has autism and they “accept it”, or else they would not invite him.

It is easy to accept a young man who sits nicely for two hours, eats his soup and then devours his fish, carefully avoiding the bones and a little later, asks what is for dessert.  He makes his own way to the restroom, we are not worried he will go the women’s rather than the men’s by mistake, or that he will run out of the building, or jump into the river. So, what is there not to accept?

Can you bring a non-verbal 11-year-old boy, with severe untreated autism and a very limited diet, to a two hour lunch in a busy restaurant, surrounded by people he does not know?  I don’t think so, it would not be accepted.

Even when Monty had quite challenging behaviors, when much younger, he did get taken everywhere.  Fortunately, small children can get away with a lot - we are programmed to be sympathetic and make allowances for them.  When children become more adult-like, we expect different behavior.  If your development plateaus at the level of a 2-year-old, strangers are going to want to keep their distance when you get bigger.

Rather than blame the strangers for their lack of tolerance, why not do more to ensure development does not stall at such an early age?  How about some awareness of that?

I keep asking why special schools where we live do not teach any alternative method of communication to non-verbal autistic children.  Schools for the deaf do teach sign language, but with a diagnosis of autism you are left with nothing.  No use is made of augmentative communication devices.  No use is made of the Picture Exchange Communication System (PECS).

Clearly awareness can be a first step towards acceptance, but there are limits to what people can accept.

My elder son told me about a boy in his circle who is very obviously gay and yet his father remains unaware, even his wife has not broken the news to him.  The news would not be well accepted, so it is just hidden away.

Now that most autism diagnosed is very mild, it is beginning to get drawn into the trending gender dysphoria topic.  Being autistic is being equated to being gay and just another difference to celebrate with rainbow colours.  It is put forward as something you can choose to mask, with your built-in cloaking device, if you want, but then you risk damaging your “mental health”.

Not surprisingly some parents of children with severe autism want a new descriptive word for their child’s condition. Autism has lost any clear meaning.  I guess they would love to buy one of those cloaking devices to mask their child’s autism, then they too could go for lunch at a fancy restaurant.

Among the least accepting adults I have met were parents at a musical performance put on by children with autism.  The parents made no allowances for interruptions made by younger siblings in the audience, it was a case of “remove your screaming child!”.  I assumed they would be more sympathetic than regular parents, but not at all.

The next question is whether acceptance is enough. At a recent parent teacher meeting at Monty's school, one new teacher was telling me how he identified with our situation, because his young niece has autism and some physical disability. He thought acceptance was the key issue at school and told me how well Monty is accepted by his class.  I did not disagree, but in my mind I was thinking "well actually, how about some learning?".  One advantage that Monty has developed since taking his PolyPill therapy, is that he has learnt many new skills that help to make him accepted.  He skis well, swims well, plays the piano well and is better at mathematics than many of his peers, so they know he is more than just a token autistic.  I think he earned some respect.  On the inclusion - delusion scale regarding mainstream schooling he is doing well.

 

What to do?

In some people’s bubbles, they are already doing a lot to improve their situation. These are the bubbles to be made aware of.

People tend to want to peer inside other people’s bubbles but then step back.  The author of a book on ECT (electro-convulsive therapy) to successfully treat her son’s severe self-injurious behavior (SIB), is bemused as to why other parents do not follow her example.  I told her that for most people ECT would be a step too far.

You would think there should be a basic standard of care available to all.  If the parents do not have a grip on the situation, at least the school should and ideally so should the pediatrician.  This probably does exist somewhere, perhaps in Scandinavia.

Acceptance has different aspects, of course it is good that people can accept others with differences and include them.  If parents just accept that their child is severely disabled by autism and then assume that nothing can be done, that would be really bad. Who ever did well by giving up?

As usual a lot of harm can be done with the best of intentions.  At both ends of the spectrum there are very one-sided views.  From the very severe end come the “horror stories” of their daily life and the conviction that there is an explosion in the incidence of their very severe autism.  At the ever-booming, slightly affected end of the spectrum is a small vocal group who are anti anything that can treat autism, whether it is behavioral therapy or pharmaceuticals. 

You might wonder what happens to all those neurodivergent people with Schizophrenia or Bipolar – don’t they get celebrated?  I do not see anyone lobbying for awareness and acceptance of them.  Why is that?  Too scary perhaps.

In many parts of the world the child with untreated severe autism is going to end up living in the same place as the adult diagnosed with Schizophrenia. Autism comes home to its big brothers Schizophrenia and indeed Bipolar, with all their overlapping miss-expressed genes.

Choose your bubble wisely.

 

What should be done?

The psychiatrists paid to write the diagnostic manuals (DSM5) need to step into the 21st century and start doing the job properly.

An observation of autistic behaviors in a patient needs to be evaluated and graded, for example with the Childhood Autism Rating Scale (CARS).  If the child is below the threshold of 30, they should not be diagnosed with autism.  Yes, that means that the school does not get extra payments and indeed neither do the parents – this often is the desire behind a diagnosis.

The people who actually have an autism score above the threshold should be the focus of the autism budget.  The bigger their challenges, the more support they should get.

One in five school children have special education needs of one sort or another and these clearly should be addressed, but not by misdiagnosing some of them with autism.

People who have a genuine autism diagnosis, should then start a process of determining what are its biological foundations and what can be done to reduce the damaging consequences that led to seeking a medical diagnosis in the first place.

If there are no damaging consequences, how can this be a case worthy of a medical diagnosis?  It isn’t autism, perhaps it is sub-clinical autism.  It is likely quirky, nerdy, introvert, anxious or even gay (ouch!) etc - all perfectly normal traits.

 

What will be done?

Nothing.

Choose your bubble on that basis and make it as enchanted as you can.






 

23 comments:

  1. Dear Peter, your post strikes so close to my heart. We are 3 months now into a fight with our daughters school. Or should I say, just one person in the school, the pedagogical
    expert. I am to weary to even describe the absolute lack of understanding this person has what inclusion means. She thinks its means tolerance. But tolerance is just a nicely dressed up version of exclusion - it implies otherness and leads to segregation and pity. My daughter is, in the right circumstances, more than capable of attending school. So far, I believe she has academically gone backwards with this school. And there was no reason for this to happen...if it had not been for the pedagogical expert who knows so very little and was the only person against our daughter going to this small private school. Last week, autism awareness day in the school was observed by thinking of an activity that all the kids could do with my daughter during the last class (obviously from this one can see , this is not the goal on other days) and this activity was planned without any inquiry into what our daughter likes and dislikes and they chose something she absolutely hates. Her unwillingness to participate in this activity was used by the pedagogical expert to comment that she is not ready for group work. If I had written a scene, I could not have made it up any better to show how deep ignorance can be.
    I have little to no hope that we will work something out, and have already selected a special school for disabled kids to switch to next year. The current school has taken so much of my energy that it feels me with deep sadness. My daughter invested so much too.
    However, there is another way to look at it - percentage of autism now is at 3 percent. When the pedagogical expert decides to have kids it will be at 4 percent. When the schools owners kids have kids, it will be at 10 percent. I already know everything about autism and my daughter is a very functiinal case, on her way to become even more so. The people who do not care and do not know, will have to learn, and very soon.
    My bubble is a lovely one, and as an Aspie, I need an even smaller one than usual people. So I cope quite well. But I do feel a general distancing from the world.
    In our conflict with the school, our asisstant has taken the brunt of it and has had to develop elaborate strategies. At one point I told her to start treating everyone BUT my daughter as if they had special needs - and it worked wonders. Parents of autistic kids need to grow up very fast and they need to lose illusions and pretense and ego trips very fast. Normal people can go on with that, and one needs to take their special needs into consideration - one is sensitive to this, the other one to that. So in this distancing, I sometimes wonder who the people with special needs are, and every day it seems to me that its the so called neurotypicals. They need platitutes, they need consideration for rank, they need to hear information not just factually but packaged into a palatable emotional form etc. Maybe its because I am an Aspie, but it really seems a lot of work to be around them.

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    1. Personalized education is as important as personalized medicine. It seems that most parents struggle to find a good solution for schooling. It depends greatly on where you live, how severely affected the child is and what are the parents’ expectations.

      Some parents want to think their child is “normal” and so insist on mainstreaming. But these children have an IEP telling the teacher that the targets are extremely low. The child gets good grades and moves forward each year, but this is just an illusion to keep the parents happy. The child does sit in the regular lessons, but is likely in a corner doing something completely different with their assistant.

      In special schools where you live children are put in classes by age, not ability, and there are no resources for 1:1 tuition. Several of our assistants worked in those schools. They all thought the solution was to start a private special school and do things properly. I told them all great idea, but who is going to pay for it?

      We had, in effect, a private special school at home just for Monty, for several years. We had far more resources than the local special school and it was all 1:1 tuition. “Home School” was every afternoon in the regular school year and all day during the school holiday.

      Of the people with autism known to our former assistants, who went to be therapists or teachers, Monty is the only one to be now studying “real” academics (math, science etc) like a typical child.

      Some degree of home schooling is going to be necessary, if you have higher expectations for your daughter.

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  2. The school I saw has just 5 pupils per class and a fair percentage are just socially disadvantaged pupils, the rest seems to be not very disabled. There was a good vibe to the school.
    My daughter has demand avoidance. I can’t add homeschooling to regular schooling, I can do either one or the other because otherwise she shuts down. She needs a lot of time off during the day. Her avoidance strategies are numerous and elaborate. If nothing else works she simply shuts down her audio channel and stops even registering that people around her exist.
    We are now starting a 6 month ivig regimen at the local clinic and hope that maybe this resolves her non autism issues which are far more hindering in the school than the autism ones - demand avoidance for example. Even if that were the case, even if overnight she became neurotypical and caught up with her peers, I do not really see a future in the school we are currently at. The issues are a 100 percent at the schools side, our daughter/we/the assistant are causing 0 of them, therefore we can’t fix them either. They literally tell us to do things a certain way and then get mad at us for doing them that way.

    She abhors numbers whereas languages and geography and swimming are her strong suits. Since she is regularly beating her school peers in the game
    connect 4, it is obvious she doesn’t have a problem with understanding numbers, just the way math is taught and presented. I have little concern for the actual academic performance of my daughter in the future, I am concerned that we won’t find a school where she will be comfortable and included.

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  3. Peter, I completely agree with your opinion on this. The only thing I want to clarify is, sometimes, it is not so simple as choosing your bubble and working hard and you get results like yours. The message for those of us like my family, who work hard for *your* bubble, for decades, is to never give up. But - find a way to not let it get the best of you or it can end up doing more harm than good. Delicate balance.
    ~Tanya

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  4. Also, if you could get back to me regarding the conference next May. We have the dates (20-21 May 2022) and location set, so far we have confirmation by dr Frye who would probably be coming live and a local doctor doing a fecal dna study for autism as well as my immunologist who treats Pans Pandas, but in the next 2 weeks we should have more confirmations from foreign experts as well.
    My email is tatjana.apos@gmail.com, you can either communicate with me or you can pass me onto these doctors. It would really be a great help.

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  5. Hello Peter, in my son's case there has been many ups and downs, just after being diagnosed he got worse, at first he was diagnosed as 1-2 in the Autism scale, I don't know if he might have been in a 3 when the bubble burst. After he worsened he was started on Bumetanide and he has been taking it for a year now, I am planning to take him to a new doctor, but how can he accurately be examined if he is on several interventions? I don't find it easy to tell a doctor. My son still has noticeable autistic traits, but before bumetanide he didn't respond to his name and couldn't answer a question.

    I am very happy with his school though he is still taking his class online, he is listed on a plan from the government implemented in Public Schools and has a support teacher that to my surprise has learned PECS and uses the illustrations with my son. I see in the parent's facebook groups how they take their children to special schools but most of them are far for us, and it would have a cost, which I'm still not sure I can cover. In May they return to the school, before the pandemic he went to several classes and always when I went to pick him up I could see from a distance he was happy, flapping his hands and watching the children play, but never really joined them. I have seen older children take genuine interest in playing with him in the park, not just because they see him different. I guess as you say, things are different when they grow up.

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    1. Lisa, you started an effective intervention when your son was at a very young age, so things should work out well. If you have a good support teacher in his public school that sounds great, because with bumetanide he will notice how other children behave and play; this then becomes a model for him to follow.

      You may need some confirmation of autism as diagnosis to access support from the school and for this you will need a doctor. Most doctors are not very interested in what therapies the parents are using and they may think you are crazy.

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  6. Hi Peter

    As much as it irritates me when I hear a 40-year-old man who`s just been diagnosed with autism claiming it`s a gift and should not be treated and so on, ive now come to the conclusion that its by including all on the one spectrum that leads to the 1 in 54 rate we now have that unlocks the big research grants now being given.

    I watched an autism documentary that said the increased rates mean autism moves up from being a tier 3 disease to a tier 2 one, unlocking more research funding. Heart disease & cancer are Tier 1.

    In a perfect world, common sense dictates autism should be sub divided by severity and called something else for mild or severe (leaving aside different causes) The 115 million Euro grant given in 2018, would go into researching treatments for Monty and another 115m given to research treatment paths for my son.

    Sadly, realistically that’s never going to happen, no large funding is going into researching something that effects just 1 in 3000 kids for example, if all conditions are sub divided and called something else.

    So, from a pragmatic viewpoint keeping the enormous spectrum by including the "mild ones" like app programmers and the celeb 50 year old just diagnosed is a burden we have to carry & price worth paying to maintain the research.

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    1. Ross, I am told that it is extremely difficult to get the funding needed for a phase autism 3 trial and one of they key reasons is that there is no precise biological diagnosis for who to include.

      An extremely rare condition that is well defined, like a single gene autism, is a viable/fundable project and that is why we have so-called “orphan drugs". There is hope for the child with the 1 in 3000 condition, indeed perhaps more so than for idiopathic autism.

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    2. maybe the right question for dr Anderson from Harvard would be ‘can these changes be seen on some sort of imaging, now that we know what to look for?’. This would enable us to lump all ‘brain inflammation’ autism in one research group.

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  7. hi Peter, I totally agree with you and believe your opinion is critical to the future of Autism. I have a autism blog in China, could you grant me the permision of paste a traslation of this post? T

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    1. Acta, feel free to translate blog posts.

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    2. acta, could you direct us to your blog and tell us more about scientific research on autism in China? The language/culture barrier is really big between us and China and I always wonder what is going on there!

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    3. hi, Thank you Peter.Actually I maintain the blog on WeChat, the most popular App in China. However, it is not seachable by Google or any others.You may try this link:
      https://mp.weixin.qq.com/s/diZCnSZdupBqattK4tAR-g

      There are lots of WeChat bloggers focusing on autism, most of are for ABA and other interventions.Braainwashing is more than science.

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    4. Hi Acta, I would also be keen to know as I can read Chinese and the Chinese has some unique therapies like head acupuncture which I heard is effective for some children with autism

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    5. Great to know that you can read Chinese! Yes acupuncture is kind of popular in China for autism, however, I don't think there are solid evidence. I also heard from some parents that it does not work and hurt kids a lot, mentally.

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  8. I do wonder how being diagnosed with Aspergers has affected me. I reacted very badly to it when I was 10 years old, to the point of no longer wanting to see the psychiatrist, and then did much better socially afterwards without their "socialisation" classes. I actually question whether I'd be classified as ASD at all under the new system. I think the diagnosis itself caused emotional harm and made me constantly question myself and my social abilities. The only reason I saw the psychiatrist was for severe anxiety, which runs in the family regardless.

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    1. Adam, I also wonder what is the point of diagnosing a condition that is not supposed to be treatable. It seems that some people do feel better with their label, while many others wonder "and now what?", expecting the door to open to wonderful support and services.

      At school I do not see having a label helps, are the bullies going to say "don't pick on him/her, he/she has high functioning autism", I don't think so.

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    2. I have not yet been diagnosed formally but definitely have aspergers. I like knowing about jt and would have loved knowing about it sooner / I was weird and knowing why would have helped: 1. to not waste energy trying to overcome certain deficits and 2. to not blame myself for them. I also probably would have opted out of procreation. I am completely certain it would have helped a lot.

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    3. Totally agree.. they made me feel like I was broken and needed fixing. I think I would have been just fine, albeit slightly quirky, but they completely destroyed any self esteem I had and made me question every action. The main reason I was bullied was anxiety related, as far as I can remember, but they insisted on making me play board games with the counsellors to try and "socialise" me. I do wonder if a lot of psychiatry is more quackery than science.

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  9. Roger, I come back to my use of bubbles. I do not believe there is an autism community; there is a tiny bubble of self-advocates who have let their diagnosis take over their life and they Tweet a lot. They have a mental illness after all and so we should not be harsh on them. Delusions and obsessions can be a feature of Asperger’s, but many other Aspies are very rational.

    There is a small bubble of people who are actually treating their case of autism, with a much bigger bubble looking in at them. Many people would think you, me and Dr Frye are crazy. Dr Frye probably thinks I am crazy.

    The wider public are not very interested; these are ones who either participated, or looked on, while all those Aspies got picked on and excluded at school. Their children will do the same to the next generation of weird uncool kids.

    The public are much more aware of the word autism, but have little idea what it means, and I cannot blame them. I do not know what it now means.

    A much better message would be a campaign to halt bullying at school and promote inclusion of people who seem different, whether it is because of religion, skin colour, intellect, lack of being cool or other perceived “weirdness”.

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  10. Hi Peter,
    What are your thoughts on public school with mix of special needs and neurotypicals vs a school for entirely special needs kids. my son is 3 years old, non-verbal and i am wondering whether to send it to a public school here in US where they have 1/2 day of preschool and 1/2 day of therapy.

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    1. Jake, that is a very important question.

      On the one hand, young children with autism usually enjoy and benefit from being around neurotypical children. On the other hand, people with severe autism usually lack the ability to learn just by observation; they need intensive 1:1 teaching to take on any new skills.

      Some special schools have very severely affected children, whereas in some other schools the level is much higher. You do not want to be the cleverest one in the special school. I suggest you go visit the special school.

      My son had mornings in mainstream school with typical children and then afternoons at home for 1:1 therapy. This worked very well, but all the learning was from the 1:1 therapy.

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