Diagnosis Help for my mum

I'm new here so first of all hello everyone..

Apologies in advance if this gets a bit long but its a long story (50 odd years to be precise).

I'm actually posting on behalf of my mum as she doesn't find it very easy to express how she feels.

Basically, my mum has always been a bit different and people have often called her 'eccentric', she's had difficulties interacting with others for as long as she can remember and didn't have any close friends at school. She didn't get any qualifications when she left school and teachers accused her of daydreaming and lacking concentration.

After leaving school she found it difficult to 'get on' in life and although she had a number of different jobs, she couldn't hold one down. So she decided to go back to college as an adult but didn't get on well here either because she had difficulty concentrating on her studies. However, she did meet my dad there and they quickly moved in together, got married and had me.

My dad's family never liked my mum though and were nasty, threatening violence against her and threatening to kidnap me. So my parents moved half way across the country to get away from his family.

After they moved my mum didn't work and didn't leave the house without my dad. Even when she did leave with my dad, she avoided anything that made her feel anxious, which included crowds, tunnels, lifts, esculators and most public bathrooms. This went on for 23 years until my dad passed away in 2013.

After this I moved back home temporarily to provide support to mum. She was suffering from depression on top of the anxiety that had plagued her all those years. After many visits to the doctor, trials of various medication, and lots of talking therapy, mum was diagnosed with Generalised Anxiety Disorder and Depression and put under the care of the Community Mental Health Team, and she still is now.

 This was all good movement in the right direction but when we both saw a documentary a few months back on Aspergers, it was like a lightbulb had gone off as so much of it seemed to ring true and we started to look around to see what other information we could find.

Mum took the Aspergers test (http://aspergerstest.net/aq-test/) and scored 43/50, and I called up the NAS phoneline to talk to them about the benefits of a potential diagnosis (as mum didn't feel comfortable on the phone). From this extra information, mum decided that she would rather know one way or another whether she had Aspergers so we went to the doctor together armed with examples.

Doctor's response was that it wasn't worthwhile diagnosing mum at this stage in her life (she's now 59) because she wouldn't get any extra support than what she's already getting from the Community Mental Health Team for her anxiety and Depression. I thought that maybe having an explanation might ease the frustration that I know mum feels about being 'different' from other people but the doctor wouldn't refer mum on to a specialist.

Mum also has a psychiatrist that she sees once every few months so we thought that we's bring it it up with her but she was dismissive and despite the examples that we gave she said that she didn't think that mum could be autistic because:

1)Mum doesn't have one particular special interest (e.g. trains) that she wants to read everything about. And

2)When the psychiatrist asked mum if she had any learning difficulties (like difficulty learning to read), mum said no.

Do these two things proclude mum from being autistic then?

There are so many things that seem to point to Aspergers like the following misunderstanding in a shop:

-Mum puts items she wishes to purchase on counter.

-Shop assistant says 'Is there anything else?'

-Mum (accused voice): Well if there was anything then I'd have put it on the counter wouldn't I?

After we left the shop mum was upset thinking that the shop assistant was accusing her of stealing. I explained to her that the shop assistant was just trying to provide good customer service and she eventually calmed down.

It's this type of misunderstanding that gets me thinking, as well as lots of other examples that I won't go into here (its long enough already!).

So, does anyone have any advice? Is it worthwhile my mum continuing to push for some kind of assessment with my help? Is there specialist support out there for people with Aspergers?

Sorry this is long and thank you in advance for any advice,

Heather x

Parents
  • Thank you all for your responses, I don't get on here that often due to no internet access at home so I'm sorry if my replies are a bit slow.

    Thank you all so much for the welcome, I will see if I can persuade mum to come on here too because I think that it would good for her to talk to people that have been in a similar position to her.

    I think a second opinion is definately the way that mum should go in the new year, as you have all so eloquently pointed out, and I want to persuade mum of this too as she was definately discouraged by the comments of the doctor and psychiatrist. I will have a look at those threads that you linked me to, thank you.

    Other than the quiz that I have mentioned in my first post, are any of you aware of any resources that could help with explaining to a doctor why we think that mum may be on the spectrum?

    Thank you for your patience with my slow replies,

    Heather

Reply
  • Thank you all for your responses, I don't get on here that often due to no internet access at home so I'm sorry if my replies are a bit slow.

    Thank you all so much for the welcome, I will see if I can persuade mum to come on here too because I think that it would good for her to talk to people that have been in a similar position to her.

    I think a second opinion is definately the way that mum should go in the new year, as you have all so eloquently pointed out, and I want to persuade mum of this too as she was definately discouraged by the comments of the doctor and psychiatrist. I will have a look at those threads that you linked me to, thank you.

    Other than the quiz that I have mentioned in my first post, are any of you aware of any resources that could help with explaining to a doctor why we think that mum may be on the spectrum?

    Thank you for your patience with my slow replies,

    Heather

Children
No Data