For those diagnosed, what level are you?

...if you're comfortable saying. 

It occurred to me after just reading another post that maybe my Level One makes some off the things I say on here seem a bit OTT (it doesn't feel that way though!) if the majority are L2 or whatever and have more 'right' (stupid thinking I know) than me to be saying anything. What percentages/ratios predominate on here in terms of all this?

Paranoid thinking maybe, it gets the better of me sometimes. I just got a weird feeling of embarrassment that I may have presumed I belong somewhere I don't. I think it will pass, and thanks for undertanding my posting this even though I can sense it's (I think?) a bit skewed, having come up as a sudden fear that seems to be demanding early closure/external invalidation. My usual issue!

Parents Reply Children
  • Levels is a DSM-5 thing I think. We're in an odd position in the uk. For most things we'd use ICD-10 but the ICD-10 was dragging its heals over advances in understanding in autism so most diagnosis's refer to the criteria in the DSM-5. Now ICD-11 is a thing the NHS will gradually swap its reporting to the WHO (something its obligated by treaty to do) from ICD-10 to ICD-11. When that happens I expect DSM-5 will stop being used as a reference for uk autism assessments. ICD-11 also has subclasification codes but they're more for classifying intelligence and whether the autistic person is verbal / communicative or not. They're not intended to indicate a required level of support the way the DSM-5 levels are.