Choking and Difficulty Swallowing

It's been a little while since I last posted so it's good to be back.

Last night, I started choking in a popular pub chain. After attempts to remove the blockage, they were unable to remove it all, so I had to go to hospital. In the end while sat waiting in A&E I was finally able to swallow it and it went down. I was lucky this time that I didn't get admitted onto a ward. I was very anxious and tense during the evening because I was in a busy environment and everyone, I was with was chatting away. I also didn't know where to focus my attention as there was a lot of distractions. 

The real point is that this has happened before. Last night wasn't the first. It happened four years ago and I was in hospital for 2 days before the blockage was removed by a surgical procedure. I have also had countless near misses, and it seems to have got worse in the last year.  

A couple of people who work in healthcare that I know have suggested I could have Dysphagia and that people on the ASD spectrum can also have this condition. As an academic student I know I should adopt cautious language about making a link between the two. However, from an anecdotal point of view it would make a lot of sense, I am awaiting assessment for ASD, and I also have problems swallowing food.

What does the community out there think about this? Has anyone on here had difficulties with swallowing themselves or with their children? Should I notify the assessors, and have it added to my notes? 

 

Parents
  • Anecdotal means the thing is based on what ordinary people say has happened to them, their personal experience. Their anecdote if you know that word better. So it does not mean based on no evidence! It means based on the evidence of actual people's experiences as told by them, as opposed to a scientific study.

    People often don't respect anecdotal evidence because it is not scientific and has not been tested. What people say can be wrong of course, they might not remember it right or they might even be lying. And if you only listen to what some kinds of people say then you get a bias. But I think it is wrong to ignore it.

    Most of this whole forum is our autistic anecdotal evidence of our lived experience of our autism!

    Of course anecdotal evidence has to be used carefully, but so does scientific evidence.

Reply
  • Anecdotal means the thing is based on what ordinary people say has happened to them, their personal experience. Their anecdote if you know that word better. So it does not mean based on no evidence! It means based on the evidence of actual people's experiences as told by them, as opposed to a scientific study.

    People often don't respect anecdotal evidence because it is not scientific and has not been tested. What people say can be wrong of course, they might not remember it right or they might even be lying. And if you only listen to what some kinds of people say then you get a bias. But I think it is wrong to ignore it.

    Most of this whole forum is our autistic anecdotal evidence of our lived experience of our autism!

    Of course anecdotal evidence has to be used carefully, but so does scientific evidence.

Children
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