Getting a diagnosis

Hello. I am new here and would love to hear from others who may be going through a similar process of trying to get a diagnosis for ASD or Asperger's in adulthood. I am in my 40s and believe I am on the spectrum. I have struggled with social anxiety, OCD, and sensory problems since childhood and been very isolated since graduating from college. I have no real meaningful friendships and romantic relationships impossible as I don't like invasion into my personal space and am uncomfortable with displays of affection. I find it hard to talk in social scenes and bright or flashing lights are a real problem for me. So is noise. I am unable to work due to the problems. 

I finally plucked up the courage to go to my GP with my suspicion I have ASD, in the hope a diagnosis would help me to get support to live independently (I live with parents), but am struggling to get a referral. I have taken tests online, all of which came back positive for ASD, but I failed one of the two tests given to me at the GP surgery by just a few points, so on that basis am told I may not get a referral but it hasn't been ruled out. I am concerned I will get a diagnosis of general anxiety or social phobia which won't be as helpful to me in the long term, and my lights issue isn't a phobia but genuinely problem as they hurt my eyes and seems to bounce everywhere. .

I am very disappointed as not all the questions were easy to answer and still believe I am on the spectrum. I also didn't test positive for OCD, as not distressed enough by symptoms apparently, so getting no real help for that either. Also I am worried that if I don't get the diagnosis then people won't accept I have mental challenges and I'll be expected to recover with some phobia therapy when I don't think realistically I can do more than manage my condition.

Anyone else finding it hard to be taken seriously? I know NHS is under pressure, and referrals cost money, which makes me feel guilty, but I do believe I have ASD, just perhaps not ticking all the right boxes on the forms. I am not unempathetic. I have too much, if anything, and have to shut things out on tv, for example, as they are too much to process.

Thank you for reading.

Parents
  • Hi Lady,

    I have only just been diagnosed (yesterday). All in the process took about 3 years. Initially my GP was not very supportive, having mental health difficulties on and off since childhood, that I never really felt fit me. Seeing a different GP and support in getting a diagnosis from the community mental health team as they were keen to get me off their books.

    The biggest thing I can say is persevere. It is hard to get a diagnosis as an adult because the funding has to come direct from the CCG, which means the GP has to apply for it. 

    That being said, the actual meeting for the diagnosis was not too bad and I was glad they gave me an answer there and then. 

Reply
  • Hi Lady,

    I have only just been diagnosed (yesterday). All in the process took about 3 years. Initially my GP was not very supportive, having mental health difficulties on and off since childhood, that I never really felt fit me. Seeing a different GP and support in getting a diagnosis from the community mental health team as they were keen to get me off their books.

    The biggest thing I can say is persevere. It is hard to get a diagnosis as an adult because the funding has to come direct from the CCG, which means the GP has to apply for it. 

    That being said, the actual meeting for the diagnosis was not too bad and I was glad they gave me an answer there and then. 

Children
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