Autism and medicine - is it worth pursuing diagnosis or will it be a barrier?

Hi guys! This is my first contribution the community, and a question has probably been asked before, but here goes...

In less than a month's time, I'll be submitting my ucas application to 4 universities, to study medicine. As a volunteer for a medical charity's youth programme, I've been given autism awareness training - when the trainer spoke about features of ASDs, how young people with autism might view the word differently from other people, I was shocked. I thought all of what she spoke about was normal, or if not normal then just one of my funny idiosyncracies. I went home, did some research and discovered that I meet many of the traits I read about and had the same difficulties. Now I'm debating whether a diagnosis is a good thing - I really don't like the idea of self - diagnosing, but I genuinely think I have it - confirmation I think would just be a trigger for looking at things differently and a way of explaining what has always been my "oddness".

Medicine is a career where empathy, teamwork, communication etc are essential, so the big question is will seeking diagnosis affect my chances? Admittedly nothing will happen until after applications have gone, but I'm still concerned that future employers may look at something like that, and, true to the stereotypes, doubt my competence and fitness to practice.

Any advice, comments or thoughts are welcome, and thank you all for your help.

Parents
  • Update: Went ahead for various reasons - GP seems convinced and is referring to "somone" but doesn't know quite who to yet because by the time anything happens via CAMHS I shall be an adult for funding purposes so they're reluctant to accept but the local "Adult ASC team" won't accept somebody without adult funding, the politics of the NHS being how it is. Apparently I should hear from the GP surgery exactly which service is getting the referral within a month, and then it's up to them.

    Thanks for your help, now it's a case of wait and see! 

Reply
  • Update: Went ahead for various reasons - GP seems convinced and is referring to "somone" but doesn't know quite who to yet because by the time anything happens via CAMHS I shall be an adult for funding purposes so they're reluctant to accept but the local "Adult ASC team" won't accept somebody without adult funding, the politics of the NHS being how it is. Apparently I should hear from the GP surgery exactly which service is getting the referral within a month, and then it's up to them.

    Thanks for your help, now it's a case of wait and see! 

Children
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