Published on 12, July, 2020
Hi, I had an assessment the other day with a psychiatrist, his conclusion was, that I have ADHD and 'autism spectrum'. Also that if 'autism spectrum condition' was a diagnosis he would give me that but he was unable to diagnose that as the 'rules' say Drs can only diagnose 'Autism spectrum disorder.' Can anyone clarify this for me as I thought being on the spectrum covered it?
Hi, Thanks for your reply. I am going to challenge the decision as it doesn't make sense and get it sorted.
Thank you for your reply. I am going to get back to them.
Well, I was diagnosed with 'Autism Spectrum Condition' by a consultant psychiatrist in the UK. The diagnosis was accepted by my GP and is now on my NHS record. I don't see how the usage of either 'condition' or 'disorder' has any effect on the validity of a diagnosis.
ASC is ASD it's just a less medicalised term. He should have just put ASD according to the DSM-5 for legal reasons and then let you call it ASC if you choose to disclose.They shouldn't not give you an official diagnosis just because the wording is imperfect, my official diagnosis is over 25yrs old and has the name of a Nazi sympathizer peice of crap (rhymes with ass burgers) on my file for life, they know better nowadays but that doesn't change that it's alwasy been relevant regardless of the terrible label.Tell your GP and report it to the PALS service, you have been denied an important diagnosis based on absolutely no reason.
Hi, I am in the UK. I'm in my 50s and still not sure if I have actually got an autistic diagnosis.
Where do you live? The rules can be dictated by insurance companies, for instance in the US or by the government elsewhere following whichever manual is considered the standard in fields of Psychology.