Guest guest Posted March 27, 2008 Report Share Posted March 27, 2008 > > There is a special on our local news right now on autism and they are > showing these kids playing appropriately with toys and each other – > running around laughing and smiling -eye contact...but they can't > talk –and when they showed one that tried he said the color red " rah " Hi , just wanted to quickly comment on your views of what an autistic child 'looks' like. Maybe you don't realize that its a spectrum disorder ranging from very mild to severe. I think the numbers are rising on the really mild cases, but that is not fact, just my opinion. Probably due to early intervention and biomed interventions. That is what helped my son, although he was always mildly on the spectrum. He attends regular school, has always been one the smartest kids in the class, just happens to have issues like apraxia and sensory issues that make it hard for him to tie his shoes, write neatly even thou he scores way abovde his age level in math. He also laughs, smiles and has excellant eye contact. He is an awesome kid who is starting to like girls:) (he's now 10 yrs old) He is everything you think is not autism, yet he is. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 27, 2008 Report Share Posted March 27, 2008 Point taken at the older age like your child....but the news segment here was preschool children -so if these were the preschool children today being diagnosed as autistic -how do you explain that? Autism has morphed so much since it was first diagnosed that it's umbrella- ed in many other diagnosis now from ADHD to DSI to apraxia...and that's no fair for those children that are not autistic and require appropriate therapies and placements for whatever it is that they do have. Like I said in that one post about autism the musical -the one boy clearly stated that he wanted to be placed in the mainstream and didn't want to go to the special school. Who are we hurting in trying so hard to help everyone with autism and lumping so many other diagnosis together which may co exist with autism -but may not? The misdiagnosed autistic children. They need awareness and a voice too! ===== Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 27, 2008 Report Share Posted March 27, 2008 My son has a duel dx of ASD and apraxia. He is extremely social, loves other kids, plays appropriatly, makes good eye contact, and uses sign language and PECS. He also makes several good word approximations which he he uses on a regular basis. Of course, six months-ago when he was diagnosed he did not do any of those things. Since then we have had extensive medical testing, started a supplementation protocol that is appropriate for him specifically, and done not only PROMPT and OT, but also Floortime and ABA. (All together he has about fifteen hours of therapy a week.) Does he still have ASD? Yes, as someone else pointed out, it is a spectrum. Will have that dx forever? Not if his symptoms continue to improve at this rate according to his neurodevelopmental pediatrician. Thank goodness we have had it so far though because it has given us access to all of those things I mentioned above. It has also given me access to the incredibly supportive autism community. I think that the media does have many misconceptions about autism - as do many people in general obviously. But I think that those misconceptions are based in the belief that children with autism do not make eye contact, are not social, and do not communicate. (The reason that many children with autism do not speak is that they have motor-planning challenges - not because they don't want to - whether they have an apraxia dx or not). Maybe in the " old days " only kids who faced more severe challenges got a spectrum dx but now that the new ASD dx is being used it covers even many kids who " just " have apraxia and DSI. Thank goodness that those children will get access to all of the help that the ASD dx can bring - as long as their parents don't get too hung up on the label. Nadine M. Silber, Esq. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 28, 2008 Report Share Posted March 28, 2008 Oh by the way. As an attorney, who has represented hundreds of children who have special needs as a child advocate, I like to think that I have pled MANY things in an " intelligent and articulate way " ... despite the fact that I have Aspergers:-) Best, Nadine Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 28, 2008 Report Share Posted March 28, 2008 Hi Nadine, One of the moderators here is Jeanne Buesser who has one son with apraxia and one with autism. She does outreach here for apraxia because while there is a wealth of support, research, and awareness for autism -there isn't for apraxia. There are far more children with apraxia then there are with autism. The problem isn't the diagnosis name -it's the inappropriate therapy that comes with it if a child isn't autistic. For those who have children misdiagnosed- the apraxia -the motor planning impairment goes unaddressed and the child remains nonverbal. Some who have children diagnosed with both autism and apraxia also find out that the autism diagnosis wasn't accurate either and that also isn't a good situation. I am hearing it from professionals that they are seeing children diagnosed with autism today that are misdiagnosed and from this group. Sensory integration dysfunction is not autism. Lack of speech is not autism. And yes- autism used to be a social impairment...that's what it is for Jeanne's youngest. So if today autism presents like apraxia - it would be nice if when the media wants to raise awareness about autism -they can at least mention that the condition today presents exactly like another condition called apraxia -but not to confuse the two because autism therapy isn't appropriate for apraxia and can be detrimental. Here's just a small amount of outraged parents just like me or outraged professionals...I'm far from the only one. I noticed that you are an attorney -Kim who I have 2 posts from below is a criminal investigative attorney and her son was misdiagnosed and placed in ABA -and it was a nightmare! The good news is that I clued her in and she got him out and into appropriate therapy where he's doing amazing. Like who was diagnosed with post traumatic stress from ABA http://www.cherab.org/news/.html -Kim's son was traumatized. This particular ABA therapist Kim said wasn't happy unless her son cried and considered that a " breakthrough " So if we are going to accept the slippery slope that autism today means a child that is social -just can't talk -then I for one am standing up against this. Oh wait- not the only one... ~~~~~~~~~~ Please, please don't let this person near your child again. I went through the exact same thing. I had all of your doubts. She was his very first speech therapist. I didn't know what to expect. I trusted that she was a professional and knew what she was doing, blah, blah, blah! My maternal instinct and my poor child's actions told me to get rid of her the very first time she behaved like that but my doubts let it go on for 5 weeks. Then I met Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 28, 2008 Report Share Posted March 28, 2008 Perhaps if those that have misdiagnosed children want to file a class action you can represent them. But not if you don't understand the problem. ===== Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 28, 2008 Report Share Posted March 28, 2008 Sorry - don't do class actions:-) I do agree with you that you should find the appropriate therapy for YOUR child - regardless of dx though. You just have access to more options when that dx is ASD. Parents have an obligation to keep on top of what works and what doesn't. For some kids on the spectrum, wherever they may fall, ABA works. For others it does not. Much has to do with what type of ABA - discrete trial, verbal behavior, errorless learning etc. and how good the therapist is. Our therapist is very playful - never demanding. Ethan does so well BECAUSE he is more apraxic than autistic. He responds with such pride when he learns new skills:-) It's how he has learned sign language and PECS. Every child is an individual. I say treat the child not the dx. Also, regardless of how busy you are, or how educated you are - do not allow your child to continue with any therapy that is actually causing more challenges. Just as a final note, I have represented many many children who are very social, very intelligent, and nonetheless genuinely autistic. I do hope that more people eventually let loose all of those old stereotypes. They are as outdated as the concept of the refriderator mother. I'm afraid that I don't have any further time to discuss this - busy playing with my very very very loving and playful and social and brilliant, and beautiful child who just happens to have ASD (at the moment):-) Best of luck to you:-) Nadine Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 28, 2008 Report Share Posted March 28, 2008 Reading through the archives, especially what I said about my son before, is interesting. More interesting is that yet again my son is again labeled as autistic. The neuro psych actually said, " PDD-NOS because it will get him more services and it's somewhere to place him. " Nice and specific, right? He saw Semantic-Pragmatic Language Disorder (which most place on the spectrum as the inverse of Aspergers - high social and low langauge) and I see a lot of that as well, but it's such an uncommon diagnosis it doesn't really help in anyway. This Dr. agreed with me that he doesn't come anywhere close to meeting the DSM-IV criteria for autism. He also didn't " get " that he had apraxia. He said I " placed too much on this motor planning thing. " and that " I can understand everything he says, I don't see any speech production problems. " My son only answered him in one word answers and he never really tried to get him to talk. His apraxia has resolved enough that he is about age appropriate in ONE WORD articulation tests. What this doctor did give us was accurate minimally language based cognitive testing. And I do value his opinions on that. This Dr. also had huge faith in the school system about how they HAD to pay for ABA training as well as other supports. Guess what? They won't. I've fought a fight for services in the last school system and I honestly don't believe more ABA would help him either. Two months before the neuro psych appointment the ped neuro said he wasn't on the spectrum. His SLP of 2.5 yrs who brought him from under 100 yrs to where he is now (still behind, but SO much improved!) still doesn't think he fits there, although she does agree with some of the SPD traits. We both feel his pragmatics are great so that doesn't fit. There may be a better fit out there than SPD. His semantic stuff might also be explained by aphasia with an unknown cause. None of this of course takes away the fact that he was clearly apraxic at one point and he is still apraxic, but it just doesn't show as much. Watch tapes from Aug 2005 or look at his VMPAC scores and you'll see apraxia without a doubt! The public school psychologist and SLP here do not believe he is autistic. The sped coordinator who also tested him doesn't believe it either. Why then did I agree to have his qualification as autism? Because it did get him what he needs. The schools here, unlike our last district, understand it's just on paper and not a label that describes all aspects of him. This is the only reason I agreed. Had I insisted on just speech and language impairment he would not qualify for a para. Why? His IQ is too high! Autism gets you an aide, but other issues with high normal IQ doesn't! The school here retested him and he scored around 70% for kids his age and in the superior range on two of the four subtests, high normal on one and low normal on the one that required the most receptive language. He would sink in class without an aide. With his severe receptive and expressive language issues he clearly needs a para so he can get verbal directions clarified without interrupting the entire class or worse not speaking up and not getting anything out of school. So whether my son is on the very fringes of an autism diagnosis or not our story makes it clear that autism does get you more in some ways and less in others. Messing around with misdiagnoses or perhaps a mistake in the degree of the autism cost my son two valuable years of appropriate therapy and countless hours of strain on the family. I look back on all the hours of frustration trying to teach him signing and PECS beyond when I felt comfortable with it, and feel guilty that I let it hit that point. But at the time I was guilted into it as well. When he didn't learn the next label they tried to attach was " cognitive delays. " We now know that he clearly doesn't have that! He had and has a language issue so signs didn't make sense either! (Plus mild motor dyspraxia hindered that too.) I strongly believe that we'd all be better of if other diagnoses had the same weight behind them as autism. I think when kids like my son have every therapy in the book thrown at them because of a label, it does a great disservice to the truly autistic kids who really need those services, but are told there is a wait list or they can only get half the hours they need. I can definitively say that my son was misdiagnosed with " moderate autism. " Perhaps he is somewhere on the ASD spectrum depending on how freely someone chooses to expand it, but I still say he has apraxia and a severe language disorder and it describes him much better! Miche Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 28, 2008 Report Share Posted March 28, 2008 Sorry, Xpost but I'm desperate for answers, desperate for hope and my question seems to fit this topic. Wondering what diagnosis my child is at now (27 months). Last summer after vaccine injury (18 months), very little eye contact, would not turn to his name, same indiscernable word over and over again, repetitive behaviors, not interacting...now after biomed (diet/vitamins/supplements/chelation- just started)...eye contact back, turns to his name, has about ten words and a few sentences(articulation is an issue), OCD behavior gone, loves to play with other kids (spent this afternoon playing with two older children-mimicking, laughing, joint attention). What concerns me is...he will say a very large word unprompted like " toothbrush " , " kittycat " , " Where did it go? " etc., but has trouble saying " Dada " , or " Mama " without prompting. An example of this odd language development...I pointed at a lizard and said " look, ,lizard " ...he replied " alligator " . Big word for a 27 month old, I thought. Even more profound was that he made the connection between the visual of a lizard and an alligator. But he still only says " Mama " when prompted and frequently leaves off the M...saying " Ama " until I correct him. So my question to the group is, given these remaining symptoms, does my son have autism? a language disorder? Apraxi? The developmental pediatrician says language disorder (which one he has no idea). The neurologist says he seems " normal " to him. The speech therapist says " He's just a late talker " . I just want to know what's wrong with my son. He has had DAN! testing with high inflammation, oxidative stress and heavy metal toxicity. Do you think he will ever recover or has irrepairable damage been done by his vaccines? Please help. Fri Mar 28, 2008 2:02 am Show Message Option ---------------------------------------------------------------------- ---------- View Source Use Fixed Width Font Unwrap Lines ---------------------------------------------------------------------- ---------- " rhondagatewood84 " <rhondagatewood84@...> rhondagatewo... Offline Send Email > > Reading through the archives, especially what I said about my son before, is > interesting. More interesting is that yet again my son is again labeled as > autistic. > > The neuro psych actually said, " PDD-NOS because it will get him more > services and it's somewhere to place him. " Nice and specific, right? He saw > Semantic-Pragmatic Language Disorder (which most place on the spectrum as > the inverse of Aspergers - high social and low langauge) and I see a lot of > that as well, but it's such an uncommon diagnosis it doesn't really help in > anyway. This Dr. agreed with me that he doesn't come anywhere close to > meeting the DSM-IV criteria for autism. He also didn't " get " that he had > apraxia. He said I " placed too much on this motor planning thing. " and that > " I can understand everything he says, I don't see any speech production > problems. " My son only answered him in one word answers and he never really > tried to get him to talk. His apraxia has resolved enough that he is about > age appropriate in ONE WORD articulation tests. What this doctor did give > us was accurate minimally language based cognitive testing. And I do value > his opinions on that. This Dr. also had huge faith in the school system > about how they HAD to pay for ABA training as well as other supports. Guess > what? They won't. I've fought a fight for services in the last school > system and I honestly don't believe more ABA would help him either. > > Two months before the neuro psych appointment the ped neuro said he wasn't > on the spectrum. His SLP of 2.5 yrs who brought him from under 100 yrs to > where he is now (still behind, but SO much improved!) still doesn't think he > fits there, although she does agree with some of the SPD traits. We both > feel his pragmatics are great so that doesn't fit. There may be a better > fit out there than SPD. His semantic stuff might also be explained by > aphasia with an unknown cause. None of this of course takes away the fact > that he was clearly apraxic at one point and he is still apraxic, but it > just doesn't show as much. Watch tapes from Aug 2005 or look at his VMPAC > scores and you'll see apraxia without a doubt! > > The public school psychologist and SLP here do not believe he is autistic. > The sped coordinator who also tested him doesn't believe it either. Why > then did I agree to have his qualification as autism? Because it did get > him what he needs. The schools here, unlike our last district, understand > it's just on paper and not a label that describes all aspects of him. This > is the only reason I agreed. Had I insisted on just speech and language > impairment he would not qualify for a para. Why? His IQ is too high! > Autism gets you an aide, but other issues with high normal IQ doesn't! The > school here retested him and he scored around 70% for kids his age and in > the superior range on two of the four subtests, high normal on one and low > normal on the one that required the most receptive language. He would sink > in class without an aide. With his severe receptive and expressive language > issues he clearly needs a para so he can get verbal directions clarified > without interrupting the entire class or worse not speaking up and not > getting anything out of school. > > So whether my son is on the very fringes of an autism diagnosis or not our > story makes it clear that autism does get you more in some ways and less in > others. Messing around with misdiagnoses or perhaps a mistake in the degree > of the autism cost my son two valuable years of appropriate therapy and > countless hours of strain on the family. I look back on all the hours of > frustration trying to teach him signing and PECS beyond when I felt > comfortable with it, and feel guilty that I let it hit that point. But at > the time I was guilted into it as well. When he didn't learn the next label > they tried to attach was " cognitive delays. " We now know that he clearly > doesn't have that! He had and has a language issue so signs didn't make > sense either! (Plus mild motor dyspraxia hindered that too.) > > I strongly believe that we'd all be better of if other diagnoses had the > same weight behind them as autism. I think when kids like my son have every > therapy in the book thrown at them because of a label, it does a great > disservice to the truly autistic kids who really need those services, but > are told there is a wait list or they can only get half the hours they need. > > I can definitively say that my son was misdiagnosed with " moderate autism. " > Perhaps he is somewhere on the ASD spectrum depending on how freely someone > chooses to expand it, but I still say he has apraxia and a severe language > disorder and it describes him much better! > > Miche > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 28, 2008 Report Share Posted March 28, 2008 Time to pull out the DSM-IV. The diagnostic criteria that must be met to obtain an autism diagnosis include social impairment, communication impairment, and restricted repetitive and stereotyped patterns of behavior, interests and activities. The comment below, " Maybe in the " old days " only kids who faced more severe challenges got a spectrum dx but now that the new ASD dx is being used it covers even many kids who " just " have apraxia and DSI. Thank goodness that those children will get access to all of the help that the ASD dx can bring - as long as their parents don't get too hung up on the label. " There is no old and new diagnosis - the DSM-IV still states the same diagnostic criteria as it did before. Children with apraxia and DSI should NOT be diagnosed as autistic if they do not meet the diagnostic criteria. My son never formally received an autism diagnosis, but I can tell you that for several months the first two therapists (OT and ST) tried to convince me that it was so and treated him as such - and it was the worst few months of his life (as well as mine). When, through devine intervention, I finally learned about apraxia and asked them the question, " if he had an apraxia diagnosis, would you be treating him differently? " They said yes. So we went and got the apraxia diagnosis. Those two didn't get a chance to treat him differently as we never returned to their agency. And don't even get me started on the spec ed preschool he spent enduring 9 days of H-E-double hockey sticks because they felt that the standard sensory diet they administered to the children with autism would suffice just fine for my DSI boy despite the fact they had been provided with his daily sensory diet. After those 9 days he was nearly catatonic after being subjected to sensory input that equaled 3x the amount he would normally get in a day. He didn't set foot back in there again, either. Sometimes the autism label does not serve an apraxic/DSI child well and may even delay getting appropriate treatment. Now , I thought you didn't want any more controversy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 28, 2008 Report Share Posted March 28, 2008 ) ===== Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 28, 2008 Report Share Posted March 28, 2008 I agree with this completely. But what happens to many (including my family) is we get told that autism is " now a spectrum disorder. " Which is it, but I think some apply it too liberally and kids like mine get lumped into the PDD-NOS area where the criteria isn't as clear. When he received the initial " moderate autism " misdiagnosis I was told I should be grateful because it will open so many doors for him for services. In his case services that didn't help and some hurt him. And what hurt the most is for that time his true issues weren't being diagnosed or treated. > There is no old and new diagnosis - the DSM-IV still states the same > diagnostic criteria as it did before. Children with apraxia and DSI > should NOT be diagnosed as autistic if they do not meet the > diagnostic criteria. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 28, 2008 Report Share Posted March 28, 2008 That is the most important point to make, Nadine! Thank you. The dx is just one of many tools to get what your child needs. Every kid with autism or apraxia has different needs, and our focus as parents should be on what our children need. My own two speech-delayed children don't even have the same issues or need the same things. Just within this one category called " apraxia " , there are different types: verbal, oral, global. You can call it whatever you want as long as you are providing a solution that works for my child. That's why I like the NACD approach -- no labels, no dx, just solutions. in NJ > > I do agree with you that you > should find the appropriate therapy for YOUR child - regardless of dx > though. You just have access to more options when that dx is ASD. > Parents have an obligation to keep on top of what works and what > doesn't. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 28, 2008 Report Share Posted March 28, 2008 Actually, most of our non-medical therapies are private ones which we carefully selected based upon how well our son responded to them so I can't say that we technically needed an ASD dx to get them. It helped having therapists who could do more than just speech therapy or OT though as even children who are not on the spectrum can learn many great things with good teaching and play. Where it did help was with mainstream medical doctors. We were able to get a lot of testing done. Through that testing we were able to put together an effective biomedical treatment that significantly diminished pour son's sensory issues, and thus, his autistic symptoms. (Just fish oil and vitamin E did not cut it for us - we needed a mito cocktail similar to the one that has her son on.) Doctors have told us that " apraxia " is just a symptom. herself has written this on more than one occasion. Sometimes it is a stand-alone symptom. Most often it is not. " ASD " is just a set of symptoms. While it is true that the DSM criteria has not technically changed if you actually speak with professionals in the field, (developmental pediatricians, psychologists etc.) you will learn that the ASD dx is " new " and is purposely meant to be more inclusive. It is so that children can get effective early intervention. You don't have to share that dx with anyone whom you do wish to and you do not have tom accept services that are not appropriate for your child. I'm sorry to hear that others have had a difficult time finding effective therapies. It is true that they are not always offered. It really is tough having to research private therapists, use trial and error to find out what works, often paying for them out-of- pocket. It would be so nice just to be able to get what your child needs easily. Much of our job as parents seems to be in educating others about the common misconceptions about our children. I find myself doing that all of the time:-) Maybe the reason that I don't have a problem with Ethan having this dx now is that I myself have had a dx and it has not held me back in the least. Just like other moms, mine struggled to get me the therapies I needed. She did and they worked well. While I am not " cured " of my Aspergers I managed to become well educated. successfull, happily married and the mother of two beautiful boys. Nobody these days even knows that I am autistic - although admittedly, they may find me a little quirky:-) Also, I truly believe that he will lose this dx at the rate he is going. His doctors agree. He is only 2.5 now and has been in therapy since he was 18 months-old. By the time he is ready for big kid school who knows. All I can say is that the dx has helped us. I'm sorry if it has not helped you. It may help others though so thanks for not encouraging people to waste time and energy with arguing the point with doctors, educators, whomever that could be better spent getting kids well. And also thanks for not propogating the stereotype that children on the spectrum are necessarily not intelligent, articulate, social, etc. which was why I actually overcame my natural social anxiety to write all of these messages:-) Best wishes, Nadine Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 28, 2008 Report Share Posted March 28, 2008 > Reading through the archives, especially what I said about my son before, is interesting. I just rtead your longer message and I really am sorry that you have had such a tough time. It must have been very difficult and I am sure that you did everything that you could for your son at every turn. You should not feel guilty about anything. I hope that things go well for your little guy. Best of luck, Nadine Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 28, 2008 Report Share Posted March 28, 2008 I completely agree. We, too, have a child that was misdiagnosed as autistic by some therapists and one pediatrician and I had serious doubts about the diagnosis. The more I learned about apraxia the more I realized that Grace was not " on the spectrum " . We finally had a neurologist put in writing that a diagnosis of autism for our daughter was " categorically inappropriate " . And that ended the debate among the therapists (and our pediatrician started denying they had ever said it) of whether she was or whether she wasn't. One thing I hear, on this board and other places, that terrifies me is when a parent thinks that accepting an autism spectrum diagnosis will result in an increase in school services. Nothing could be further from the truth in most school districts. In many districts, a diagnosis of classic autism will result in an increase in services but those services are not specific to apraxia and therefore, may do more harm than good. More importantly, in many districts, a diagnosis of ASD (specifically PDD) results in a severe cut in services. And ASD and autism are seen, in districts (not on the DSM, just in the districts) as different entities and these kids are staffed at different levels. In our county the philosophy is this.... IDEA states that the school needs to provide those services that allow a child to live independently and receive an education. For a child with classic autism, this means they need many interventions to help them with social skills, meeting societal norms, etc that will need to be in place for them to one day (possibly) live independently and/or have a job. For the PDD kid, they are seen as already having enough of those skills and therefore do not require any additional special services for the IDEA mandate to be met. Because they are able to align this philosophy with the IDEA purpose statement, parents have not been successful in fighting this staffing and the lace of speech/OT/ etc. So, using their philosophy, in this district, a child will get more services (and the parent will be able to more effectively advocate for the child) if they actually kept the apraxia diagnosis and didn't accept the PDD diagnosis. The bottom line is that the wrong diagnosis can often lead to the wrong therapy. And incorrect therapy modalities are never acceptable simply because a child is receiving " more " therapy. It is not wise to " accept " or " pursue " the wrong ASD diagnosis in the hopes of increasing therapy time. The goal is not to get the apraxic child more of any type of therapy. The goal is for the apraxic child to receive additional services that are appropriate for his/her diagnosis and their cognitive/social/emotional level, thus giving them the greatest chance at success. Kris The Knitting Wannabe http://www.knittingwannabe.com Sonny & Shear: The I Got Ewe, Babe Yarn Shop http://www.sonnyandshear.com On Mar 27, 2008, at 10:14 PM, wrote: > Time to pull out the DSM-IV. The diagnostic criteria that must be > met to obtain an autism diagnosis include social impairment, > communication impairment, and restricted repetitive and stereotyped > patterns of behavior, interests and activities. > > The comment below, " Maybe in the " old days " only kids who faced more > severe challenges got a spectrum dx but now that the new ASD dx is > being used it covers even many kids who " just " have apraxia and > DSI. Thank goodness that those children will get access to all of > the help that the ASD dx can bring - as long as their parents don't > get too hung up on the label. " > > There is no old and new diagnosis - the DSM-IV still states the same > diagnostic criteria as it did before. Children with apraxia and DSI > should NOT be diagnosed as autistic if they do not meet the > diagnostic criteria. My son never formally received an autism > diagnosis, but I can tell you that for several months the first two > therapists (OT and ST) tried to convince me that it was so and > treated him as such - and it was the worst few months of his life > (as well as mine). When, through devine intervention, I finally > learned about apraxia and asked them the question, " if he had an > apraxia diagnosis, would you be treating him differently? " They > said yes. So we went and got the apraxia diagnosis. Those two > didn't get a chance to treat him differently as we never returned to > their agency. > > And don't even get me started on the spec ed preschool he spent > enduring 9 days of H-E-double hockey sticks because they felt that > the standard sensory diet they administered to the children with > autism would suffice just fine for my DSI boy despite the fact they > had been provided with his daily sensory diet. After those 9 days > he was nearly catatonic after being subjected to sensory input that > equaled 3x the amount he would normally get in a day. He didn't set > foot back in there again, either. > > Sometimes the autism label does not serve an apraxic/DSI child well > and may even delay getting appropriate treatment. > > Now , I thought you didn't want any more controversy > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 28, 2008 Report Share Posted March 28, 2008 Nadine I am proud of you for overcoming! Please continue to. Perhaps it's my misunderstanding of what autism is too. I know many children diagnosed autistic -and know it typically was a child that needed to be encouraged to speak due to being in their own world -vs needing help in actually learning how to speak because they are apraxic. Here's a child that had severe behavior problems due to her frustrations from not being able to communicate -but she's not autistic she's apraxic -and without Liz to model for her she was essentially nonverbal http://www.debtsmart.net/talk/halley.html But in today's world she would be diagnosed autistic and placed in ABA which would have been a nightmare for her as she is severe to profound apraxic with severe motor planning deficits =Haley was with me with some PhD professionals when we were interviewed for a TV segment on apraxia (one of the only in the world) http://www.cherab.org/news/phototrip2002.html Saying that it's a stereotype to say autism has nothing to do with social issues or eye contact -isn't that kind of like saying that apraxia has nothing to do with speech? I don't say this to hurt you or anyone else -but to clarify. You can find these statements all over the net: " One of the most characteristic symptoms of autism is a dysfunction in social behavior. " http://www.autism.org/social.html Specification of Diagnostic Criteria Rutter (1978a) documented the chaos that reigned for some years after Kanner's early report, with a wealth of terminology (e.g. infantile autism, childhood psychosis, childhood schizophrenia) being applied inconsistently to children who had some or all of the clinical features of Kanner's early cases. Rutter discussed the question of how far autism could be regarded as a syndrome and how it related to other conditions. He concluded that, although there were still many unsettled questions, in order to avoid ambiguity, investigators should adopt the following criteria in relation to behavior before 5 years of age to define childhood autism: http://www.mugsy.org/bishop.htm I've thought about the choices on behalf of my own son who is growing up in this crazy politically correct world where you can't call a pot a pot -you have to call it a kitchen utensil because how do you know it's a pot and not a pan? So Tanner's either going ahead going to be known as being autistic since today autism has nothing to do with social issues or eye contact or playing appropriately and all it means is that the child has a speech issue and possibly with or without sensory issues...which explains the stat 1 in 150 children. What about adults who get into a car accident and develop sensory integration dysfunction -going ahead -would that be autism too? On the other hand we have the even less appealing world of apraxia with no funding for even clear evidence of what works -no awareness -no huge media person that has a grandson with apraxia so that they can produce " apraxia the musical " All we have is a lame world where some want the name to be changed to " childhood apraxia of speech " and I have an 11 year old. That name is adding insult to injury and parents of 3 year olds don't even see it coming yet to know to fight it. So in that case I'm with you Nadine and Tanner is autistic. So from what I'm hearing Tanner was misdiagnosed and should have been diagnosed autistic? The new form of autism is a type that is called " apraxia " where the child needs speech and occupational therapy and unlike other autistics doesn't require ABA. So we have to separate the apraxic autistics from the rest of the autistics? Only one problem..... What about those with for real autism and apraxia? ===== Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 28, 2008 Report Share Posted March 28, 2008 Well said! Kris The Knitting Wannabe http://www.knittingwannabe.com Sonny & Shear: The I Got Ewe, Babe Yarn Shop http://www.sonnyandshear.com On Mar 28, 2008, at 1:24 PM, kiddietalk wrote: > Nadine I am proud of you for overcoming! Please continue to. > > Perhaps it's my misunderstanding of what autism is too. I know many > children diagnosed autistic -and know it typically was a child that > needed to be encouraged to speak due to being in their own world -vs > needing help in actually learning how to speak because they are > apraxic. Here's a child that had severe behavior problems due to her > frustrations from not being able to communicate -but she's not > autistic > she's apraxic -and without Liz to model for her she was essentially > nonverbal http://www.debtsmart.net/talk/halley.html But in today's > world she would be diagnosed autistic and placed in ABA which would > have been a nightmare for her as she is severe to profound apraxic > with > severe motor planning deficits =Haley was with me with some PhD > professionals when we were interviewed for a TV segment on apraxia > (one > of the only in the world) > http://www.cherab.org/news/phototrip2002.html > > Saying that it's a stereotype to say autism has nothing to do with > social issues or eye contact -isn't that kind of like saying that > apraxia has nothing to do with speech? I don't say this to hurt you or > anyone else -but to clarify. You can find these statements all over > the net: > > " One of the most characteristic symptoms of autism is a dysfunction in > social behavior. " > http://www.autism.org/social.html > > Specification of Diagnostic Criteria > Rutter (1978a) documented the chaos that reigned for some years after > Kanner's early report, with a wealth of terminology (e.g. infantile > autism, childhood psychosis, childhood schizophrenia) being applied > inconsistently to children who had some or all of the clinical > features > of Kanner's early cases. > Rutter discussed the question of how far autism could be regarded as a > syndrome and how it related to other conditions. He concluded that, > although there were still many unsettled questions, in order to avoid > ambiguity, investigators should adopt the following criteria in > relation to behavior before 5 years of age to define childhood autism: > http://www.mugsy.org/bishop.htm > > I've thought about the choices on behalf of my own son who is growing > up in this crazy politically correct world where you can't call a > pot a > pot -you have to call it a kitchen utensil because how do you know > it's > a pot and not a pan? > > So Tanner's either going ahead going to be known as being autistic > since today autism has nothing to do with social issues or eye contact > or playing appropriately and all it means is that the child has a > speech issue and possibly with or without sensory issues...which > explains the stat 1 in 150 children. > > What about adults who get into a car accident and develop sensory > integration dysfunction -going ahead -would that be autism too? > > On the other hand we have the even less appealing world of apraxia > with > no funding for even clear evidence of what works -no awareness -no > huge > media person that has a grandson with apraxia so that they can > produce " apraxia the musical " All we have is a lame world where some > want the name to be changed to " childhood apraxia of speech " and I > have > an 11 year old. That name is adding insult to injury and parents of 3 > year olds don't even see it coming yet to know to fight it. > > So in that case I'm with you Nadine and Tanner is autistic. > > So from what I'm hearing Tanner was misdiagnosed and should have been > diagnosed autistic? The new form of autism is a type that is > called " apraxia " where the child needs speech and occupational therapy > and unlike other autistics doesn't require ABA. So we have to separate > the apraxic autistics from the rest of the autistics? Only one > problem..... > > What about those with for real autism and apraxia? > > ===== > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 28, 2008 Report Share Posted March 28, 2008 Nadine has commented that kids on the spectrum can be sociable. I think others are confusing what this term means. As far as I know, it means enjoying being around other people and wanting to have conversation. It's very possible to be ASD and sociable. I think the confusion is ASD includes a problem with social SKILLS. They may want to have conversations and be around other people, but often misinterpret what is going on in the conversation. They may not understand the nuances and miss inuendos and sarcasm. They may not recognize the meaning of the other person's body language. My 10 year old Aspie is EXTREMELY sociable yet, his actions are often inappropriate. He will walk up to anyone and have a conversation. But the conversation will consist of only him talking. He will occassionally pause and let the other person speak, but he tends to pick up right where he left off. The other person's comments are not taken into consideration. If the other person looks away, he will move to get right in front of their face. He doesn't interpret the look away as someone who is uninterested in the conversation. His eye contact is not great, but he does it well enough that no one ever sees it as a problem. Just wanted to support Nadines comments that being sociable does not rule out ASD. You have to look at the social skills and see if they are appropriate. > > Nadine I am proud of you for overcoming! Please continue to. > > Perhaps it's my misunderstanding of what autism is too. I know many > children diagnosed autistic -and know it typically was a child that > needed to be encouraged to speak due to being in their own world -vs > needing help in actually learning how to speak because they are > apraxic. Here's a child that had severe behavior problems due to her > frustrations from not being able to communicate -but she's not autistic > she's apraxic -and without Liz to model for her she was essentially > nonverbal http://www.debtsmart.net/talk/halley.html But in today's > world she would be diagnosed autistic and placed in ABA which would > have been a nightmare for her as she is severe to profound apraxic with > severe motor planning deficits =Haley was with me with some PhD > professionals when we were interviewed for a TV segment on apraxia (one > of the only in the world) > http://www.cherab.org/news/phototrip2002.html > > Saying that it's a stereotype to say autism has nothing to do with > social issues or eye contact -isn't that kind of like saying that > apraxia has nothing to do with speech? I don't say this to hurt you or > anyone else -but to clarify. You can find these statements all over > the net: > > " One of the most characteristic symptoms of autism is a dysfunction in > social behavior. " > http://www.autism.org/social.html > > Specification of Diagnostic Criteria > Rutter (1978a) documented the chaos that reigned for some years after > Kanner's early report, with a wealth of terminology (e.g. infantile > autism, childhood psychosis, childhood schizophrenia) being applied > inconsistently to children who had some or all of the clinical features > of Kanner's early cases. > Rutter discussed the question of how far autism could be regarded as a > syndrome and how it related to other conditions. He concluded that, > although there were still many unsettled questions, in order to avoid > ambiguity, investigators should adopt the following criteria in > relation to behavior before 5 years of age to define childhood autism: > http://www.mugsy.org/bishop.htm > > I've thought about the choices on behalf of my own son who is growing > up in this crazy politically correct world where you can't call a pot a > pot -you have to call it a kitchen utensil because how do you know it's > a pot and not a pan? > > So Tanner's either going ahead going to be known as being autistic > since today autism has nothing to do with social issues or eye contact > or playing appropriately and all it means is that the child has a > speech issue and possibly with or without sensory issues...which > explains the stat 1 in 150 children. > > What about adults who get into a car accident and develop sensory > integration dysfunction -going ahead -would that be autism too? > > On the other hand we have the even less appealing world of apraxia with > no funding for even clear evidence of what works -no awareness -no huge > media person that has a grandson with apraxia so that they can > produce " apraxia the musical " All we have is a lame world where some > want the name to be changed to " childhood apraxia of speech " and I have > an 11 year old. That name is adding insult to injury and parents of 3 > year olds don't even see it coming yet to know to fight it. > > So in that case I'm with you Nadine and Tanner is autistic. > > So from what I'm hearing Tanner was misdiagnosed and should have been > diagnosed autistic? The new form of autism is a type that is > called " apraxia " where the child needs speech and occupational therapy > and unlike other autistics doesn't require ABA. So we have to separate > the apraxic autistics from the rest of the autistics? Only one > problem..... > > What about those with for real autism and apraxia? > > ===== > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 28, 2008 Report Share Posted March 28, 2008 Very good explanation! Most high functioning autistic kids I have seen are very social. They like being around others and enjoy group play, but they aren't always appropriate with their interactions. They get too close, or too far away, or touch too much or not enough. And for the very verbal ones they don't know when to stop talking because they can't read the non-verbal cues of boredom or even verbal attempts to change the subject. All of this is of course in comparison to their peers and appropriate developmental levels. Miche On Fri, Mar 28, 2008 at 12:46 PM, elmccann <elmccann@...> wrote: > Nadine has commented that kids on the spectrum can be sociable. I > think others are confusing what this term means. As far as I know, > it means enjoying being around other people and wanting to have > conversation. It's very possible to be ASD and sociable. I think > the confusion is ASD includes a problem with social SKILLS. They may > want to have conversations and be around other people, but often > misinterpret what is going on in the conversation. They may not > understand the nuances and miss inuendos and sarcasm. They may not > recognize the meaning of the other person's body language. > > My 10 year old Aspie is EXTREMELY sociable yet, his actions are often > inappropriate. He will walk up to anyone and have a conversation. > But the conversation will consist of only him talking. He will > occassionally pause and let the other person speak, but he tends to > pick up right where he left off. The other person's comments are not > taken into consideration. If the other person looks away, he will > move to get right in front of their face. He doesn't interpret the > look away as someone who is uninterested in the conversation. His > eye contact is not great, but he does it well enough that no one ever > sees it as a problem. > > Just wanted to support Nadines comments that being sociable does not > rule out ASD. You have to look at the social skills and see if they > are appropriate. > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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