People who self-diagnose gaining access to services

A major autism organisation is giving access to groups/services for adults with Asperger's and high functioning autism to adults who self-diagnose.

Those who self-diagnose are highly motivated, unlike many adults with autism where motivation can be an issue.  They are more likely to attend groups than those with significant problems. These self-diagnosed adults as service users have a say in how services are run.  In this organisation, they want groups set up that exclude those with Asperger's and high functioning autism who have more problems than they do.

This mirrors what has happened in some online groups for people with Asperger's that have been dominated by those desperately seeking a diagnosis.

What other condition allows those that self-diagnose to be given access to services?  It could be argued that everyone as some autisitic traits i.e. is on the autism spectrum.  But surely the point of diagnosis is to identify those that are in need of support services.  To be given a diagnosis, there must be 'significant impairment'.  Many of those desperate for a diagnosis do not meet the criterea.  For many 'Asperger's Syndrome' seems a trendy diagnosis - it doesn't have the baggage of many conditions linked to the mind/brain.  They have little awarenees of the many difficulties faced by those living with Asperger's/high functioning autism.

I believe allowing people who self-diagnose access to services makes diagnosis meaningless.  In the long term, it is likely to have a negative affect on funding for services for adults.

What are your thoughts?

 

Parents
  • Former Member
    Former Member

    It's not easy in the UK for adults to obtain a diagnosis - in fact in some areas it's impossible.  The alternative is to go privately but this option isn't open to everyone and as Longman says it's possible that people who self-diagnose will get things moving - but that's all it will do.  To have AS included on medical records or be eligible for financial help an official diagnosis is necessary.

    The truth is that at the present time there is a certain hostility towards adult diagnosis based on:

    (a) a belief that they should not actually be included on the spectrum, that the parameters for judging AS have been widened too much.

    (b) that diagnosing of adults isn't thorough enough.  However, when dealing with people over (say) 40 years of ago it may be impossible to access school reports, parents may be dead and people who one knew when young no longer be around.  

    (c) that diagnoses acquired privately are not up to the standards of those by NHS professionals and/or they are supplied by people just out to make money.

     

     

Reply
  • Former Member
    Former Member

    It's not easy in the UK for adults to obtain a diagnosis - in fact in some areas it's impossible.  The alternative is to go privately but this option isn't open to everyone and as Longman says it's possible that people who self-diagnose will get things moving - but that's all it will do.  To have AS included on medical records or be eligible for financial help an official diagnosis is necessary.

    The truth is that at the present time there is a certain hostility towards adult diagnosis based on:

    (a) a belief that they should not actually be included on the spectrum, that the parameters for judging AS have been widened too much.

    (b) that diagnosing of adults isn't thorough enough.  However, when dealing with people over (say) 40 years of ago it may be impossible to access school reports, parents may be dead and people who one knew when young no longer be around.  

    (c) that diagnoses acquired privately are not up to the standards of those by NHS professionals and/or they are supplied by people just out to make money.

     

     

Children
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