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Guest post: "We need to stop looking for a 'cause' for autism"

256 replies

MumsnetGuestPosts · 29/10/2015 15:11

When I tell parents that I've been writing about autism for 15 years, it doesn't take long to get to the questions. They lean in close and ask, "It's the vaccines, isn't it?" Or, "It's the pesticides, am I right?" Or, "I heard it's the GM foods?" It, that is, being the mysterious X factor responsible for the dramatic rise in autism diagnoses since the early 1990s.

Fundraising organisations in America routinely refer to this increase as an autism 'tsunami', or even an 'epidemic', as if your child could catch it in the playground. Meanwhile, health officials - wary of making blanket statements about hot-button issues before all the facts are in - cautiously attribute the rise to factors such as broadened diagnostic criteria and greater public awareness. But these bureaucratic phrases are cold comfort to a young mum wondering why her three-year-old insists on lining up his toys in strict queues.

As I peeled back layers of medical history to write NeuroTribes, I found a number of issues at play behind the increase in diagnoses. Among them was the story of a very determined young mother named Lorna Wing, who was a psychiatrist at University College London.

When Lorna's daughter, Susie, was diagnosed in the 1960s, autism was considered to be a very rare condition. There was no concept of a broad autism spectrum that includes both chatty Doctor Who fans and intellectually disabled adults who require assistance in daily living. Instead, autism was widely considered to be a rare form of infantile psychosis caused by 'refrigerator mothers' who were unable to offer their children adequate love and affection.

This tragically misguided theory had a catastrophic effect on families as children were sent away to custodial care facilities that were little more than warehouses for the 'severely subnormal', while many parents like Lorna and her husband John bore unspeakable burdens of guilt, shame, and grief.

When I interviewed Lorna, she told me that she thought the theory that autism was caused by neglectful parenting was "bloody stupid" from the start. She and John were both warm and affectionate people who doted on their daughter, but Susie didn't respond in the ways that a typically developing child would. She never directed her mother's gaze toward an object of mutual interest by pointing, for example. And when Susie had an imaginary tea party, she always sipped her imaginary tea alone.

Lorna wanted to spare other families the anguish of raising an autistic child in a world that offered few forms of support and resources for special education. In the 1970s, Lorna and her assistant Judy Gould undertook an ambitious survey for the Medical Research Council to locate all the children with cognitive disabilities whose families needed assistance in Camberwell, south London. The two researchers found many more children who exhibited the characteristic traits of autism than the prevailing theories would have predicted. They also found that the range of clinical presentations was much broader and more colourful than most clinicians believed. In other words, Judy told me, "these children didn't fit into nice, neat boxes."

Lorna and Judy lobbied their peers to replace the narrow conception of autism - which made it impossible for many of these children to get the help that a diagnosis would make available - with a much broader and more inclusive model that they named the autism spectrum. They also introduced a new diagnostic category, Asperger's syndrome, to make services available to highly verbal teenagers and adults. And the surge of new diagnoses began - just as Lorna and Judy predicted it would.

To them, this was good news; it meant help was more readily available to those who needed it. Unfortunately, people who were ignorant of their work were quick to attribute the rising numbers to the MMR vaccine, pesticides, mercury, wi-fi, and any number of other factors in the modern world.

Lorna knew, however, that people like her daughter have always been part of the human community - hidden behind other psychiatric labels, confined behind the walls of institutions, or struggling to get by with no diagnosis at all. This is not just a theory: in recent years, two major studies (one in the United Kingdom and one in Sweden) confirmed that the prevalence of autism hasn't gone up in recent years. The 'tsunami' of autism diagnoses is actually an epidemic of recognition. We now know that there are a large number of autistic people in our communities - needing help, education, housing, psychological services, reasonable accommodations in the workplace, and ways of making meaningful contributions with the special gifts of their atypical minds.

The problem with seeing people on the spectrum as a historical anomaly - as tragic victims of the toxic modern world - is that society will squander scarce and precious resources on hunting for causes and conspiracies, when what we should be doing is building more support systems for autistic people and their families. The fact that families in the UK still often have to wait years for a diagnosis indicates that the work of changing the world that Lorna and Judy embarked upon in Camberwell 40 years ago has barely begun.

Steve Silberman is the author of NeuroTribes: How to Think Smarter About People Who Think Differently.

OP posts:
Devilishpyjamas · 31/10/2015 11:49

Oh he definitely understands he is severely autistic & can't communicate. He is fully aware.

I just hope he can't read & understand everything around him because if that's the case he's trapped in a living hell. Unfortunately I suspect that he may well be.

RealHuman · 31/10/2015 11:55

Sorry, that's what I meant, the second half of what you said, Devilish. I was unclear, my apologies.

ouryve · 31/10/2015 12:03

Ds1's school takes the kids to lots of isolated moorland! Could have done with the weather for some of that, this week. Ds2's behaviour has been horrendous. Breally obsessive and screechy. OTOH he's parroting back ds1's threats and reprimands with new found clarity.

And yep, ds1 has a high IQ. His mental health is v fragile.

RealHuman · 31/10/2015 12:09

Ah, I see what the problem was. I said "hoping he isn't trapped with understanding that he can't communicate", meaning to say trapped in that he can't communicate the understanding that he has, rather than meaning trapped and not able to understand THAT he can't communicate. My grammar was ambiguous.

ThumbWitchesAbroad · 31/10/2015 12:20

DSM is the "gold standard" in the Western world for diagnosis of mental health conditions. It's also used in Australia, despite being American.

I have 2 friends here with children who almost certainly have PDA (pathological demand avoidance) - one has been diagnosed as ADHD with ODD (possible, but he fits the profile for PDA better) and the other is still awaiting assessment and ticks every box for PDA. But the first child, the one diagnosed with ODD and ADHD, when his mother asked the paed. psych about PDA, said "oh that's not in the DSM so we don't recognise it in Australia". Good oh, that's great, because it's not like it's an important distinction or anything, or that it needs completely different handling/behaviour management than other ASD conditions, oh no.
Oh wait - yes it does!

So my other friend, with the child who 100% fits the bill for PDA, will be unable to get her child diagnosed with it because it's not in the DSM. Whoop-de-doo. Luckily the child's school teacher IS receptive to the behaviour management ideas that the mother has given her, and they do help - otherwise both teacher and child would be having an extremely miserable experience. But the school itself cannot recognise the condition until a diagnosis is imposed - which is unlikely to happen because of the DSM.

I also have a UK friend whose child appears to have PDA. Their local health authority have said they do not recognise PDA as it's not in the DSM. But the neighbouring one does, and luckily for my friend, the GP and the education people have agreed that she can go out of area for the diagnosis.

I realise this is an aside from the OP's post but I thought it merited a mention since the DSM had been brought up.

zzzzz · 31/10/2015 12:28

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ThumbWitchesAbroad · 31/10/2015 12:30

Seems to be these days - I'm hearing more and more that people are refusing to diagnose anything that isn't in the DSM, in the UK, here, and of course in America. Don't know about non-English speaking countries, of course.

PhilPhilConnors · 31/10/2015 12:34

Thumb, PDA isn't readily recognised in the uk either, depending on where you're based.
There was no support whatsoever for ds until he had a diagnosis, and even now it's sketchy because he masks in school and doesn't look like he needs support, even though he does.
I'm still trying to persuade them that masking is not the same as coping.
And in the meantime we have to manage the violence, anger and suicidal behaviour alone as he has to engage and show some behaviours before he can be helped Hmm.
Is going private for an assessment an option in Australia?

RealHuman · 31/10/2015 12:34

I prefer my DSM ASD diagnosis to the ICD Childhood Autism one they gave me, only because I'm not a child Grin But yes, a lot of people seem to have started using DSM to the exclusion of anything else.

PhilPhilConnors · 31/10/2015 12:37

Our local hospital use ICD 10 not the DSM.

ThumbWitchesAbroad · 31/10/2015 12:39

Don't know - because the system isn't like the NHS, so although there is Medicare, you have to pay for some things anyway, and paed psychs seem to be one of those things - so private or not, may make no difference.

What my friend is looking for is a progressive paed psych who is prepared to take her information and notes on behaviour management and think outside the DSM box, and give a creative diagnosis that fits.

Another friend has a child with dyspraxia but that diagnosis is currently unrecognised as dyspraxia here - they call it something else (much longer and more involved to do with muscle weakness, can't remember exactly), but it's still dyspraxia. So - same condition, same management but different name - we're hoping that similar can be achieved for the child with PDA.

zzzzz · 31/10/2015 12:41

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PhilPhilConnors · 31/10/2015 12:42

It's rubbish Thumb.
We're finding that unless a child fits nearly into a box with an obvious label, there's very little understanding, just a whole load of obstructive professionals telling us we're not seeing the behaviour we see on a daily basis!

Devilishpyjamas · 31/10/2015 12:43

PDA apparently not diagnosed in my area. I've heard on the grapevine

zzzzz · 31/10/2015 12:43

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zzzzz · 31/10/2015 12:45

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ThumbWitchesAbroad · 31/10/2015 12:51

I do get cross about the PDA situation because the behaviour management of it is really quite different to some of the management techniques used for other ASD - so it's no good labelling a child with PDA as having ASD, because their needs quite clearly won't be met if treated as having ASD. :(

PhilPhilConnors · 31/10/2015 12:59

Some areas are more open about PDA.
There is some info about different trusts who have undergone training in PDA, but quite often this serves to limit diagnosis to the most severely affected children, as they don't seem to understand that like ASD, PDA is also a spectrum.
I've often seen it diagnosed as ADHD with ODD, but the ODD diagnosis then serves as a stick to beat parents with as they're seen as not creating proper boundaries for their dc, when strict boundaries make a PDA child's anxiety go through the roof and makes things worse.

PhilPhilConnors · 31/10/2015 13:00

X-post thumb, quite agree!

ThumbWitchesAbroad · 31/10/2015 13:05

Exactly Phil! Completely different set of behaviour management techniques required. My friend's child is a different child now that she's started using the PDA techniques instead of the others.

zzzzz · 31/10/2015 13:10

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ThumbWitchesAbroad · 31/10/2015 13:14

Maybe someone forgot to tell the paed psych that my friend saw then, zzzzzz as they definitely work to DSM.

zzzzz · 31/10/2015 13:32

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ThumbWitchesAbroad · 31/10/2015 13:35

I think some of it is good and some of it may prove to be less good, we'll have to see what happens.

Is there any real doubt that ASD runs in families now? I didn't think so, but I'm fairly new to it (so many friends and family with children with ASD, and retrospective realisation that adults in the family also have it).

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