1-2% autistic

Can this be true? I think it's way more since the spectrum is so broad. Lurking on this board everyone here articulate and write like any normal person, probably even better than your random Joe. I would never tell that this was a forum for people diagnosed with autism if it was the same people for a different thing. 

Growing up, in school etc. with the autism critirias as hard to small talk, form and keep relationships... majority of the people in school/uni have difficulties with this. Why do you think people drink, to open up more from their locked personality. Of course you always have the smooth talkers and intelligent but they are a minority compared to people that mostly shy away or don't have a good amount of things to talk about.

I really know more guys that couldn't keep a telephone conversation for 5 minutes than guys that could talk for hours.

Sure it's the social cues as well. But those that understand social cues and facial expression why aren't they all talkative people? What is keeping them away from expressing themselves? 

Parents
  • I wonder about this too. I suppose the hidden undiagnosed level one percentage makes it a little more. Ive seen it suggested that there could now be as many as one in 45 which is 2.2%. That would be people who would meet clinical diagnosis criteria. Those more sofly ‘on the spectrum’ (where a number of traits are subtly present but not the full house) insofar as being on a bridge between NT and level one, might make up another couple of per cent, not sure. 

Reply
  • I wonder about this too. I suppose the hidden undiagnosed level one percentage makes it a little more. Ive seen it suggested that there could now be as many as one in 45 which is 2.2%. That would be people who would meet clinical diagnosis criteria. Those more sofly ‘on the spectrum’ (where a number of traits are subtly present but not the full house) insofar as being on a bridge between NT and level one, might make up another couple of per cent, not sure. 

Children
No Data