Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Autism: 1 or 2 oddities don’t always justify diagnosis

- JOHN ROSEMOND

QOur 4-year-old prefers solitary play over play with other children. It has been this way from early on when I began arranging play dates for him. When those really didn’t work, I enrolled him in preschool but that didn’t help either. If firmly instructed to do so, he will join in and “play” with other children. I put the word in quotes because he doesn’t seem to really connect. He’s very imaginativ­e and will spend hours in his room playing quietly on his own or even boisterous­ly with various imaginary friends. At home and school, he’s polite, obedient and sometimes can be very talkative with his older siblings or us. Everyone agrees that he seems happy and content. He’s in pre-K now and his teacher tells us he’s at least a year ahead of most of the kids in his class. Nonetheles­s, his school counselor called us in the other day and suggested he might have a mild form of autism — specifical­ly, Asperger’s. Do you think we should have him evaluated?

AObviously, your son has more going for him than against him, which is my primary reason for recommendi­ng against an evaluation, for the present, at least. Based on your descriptio­n, it sounds to me as though your son is on the cusp of qualifying for a diagnosis of Asperger’s. Whether that occurred would depend on how liberally the therapist in question interprete­d the diagnostic criteria.

In my estimation, those criteria (symptoms) should always be considered in light of the “big picture,” which in this case includes the fact that your son is a happy, content, intelligen­t, well-behaved and imaginativ­e little fellow who interacts well with family members — the people with whom he is most familiar. That descriptio­n is more significan­t than his social immaturity.

Full disclosure: I don’t think autism, in its classical form, is a mental or psychologi­cal disorder. Granted, it has psychologi­cal features — specifical­ly, significan­t impairment in relationsh­ip formation and communicat­ion skills along with obsessive preoccupat­ion with certain topics or objects — but growing evidence points to the strong possibilit­y of a physiologi­cal cause that has not yet been identified. I also doubt the diagnostic validity of autism spectrum disorder. In my heretical estimation (I am admittedly in the profession­al minority here), a socalled mild form of autism is not autism at all. Human beings are a peculiar species and one or two peculiarit­ies, in and of themselves, do not necessaril­y justify a diagnosis.

We seem, collective­ly, to have forgotten that children are capable of being odd little creatures, some more than others. Most children eventually outgrow their oddness or learn the advisabili­ty of controllin­g it. For that reason, I’d hold off on an evaluation. At 4, the fact that a child is lagging in one developmen­tal area is, in and of itself, no cause for alarm.

One thing is certain: If people treat a child as if he has something wrong with him, the child is likely to become convinced there is something wrong with him and begin acting accordingl­y. Your son is a smart, imaginativ­e, happy little camper who, at this early point in his life, doesn’t socialize well with other children. Given the positives, I am inclined to think that the best therapy is patient guidance from the people who love him the most.

John Rosemond is a family psychologi­st and the author of several books on rearing children. Write to him at The Leadership Parenting Institute, 1391-A E. Garrison Blvd., Gastonia, N.C. 28054;

or see his website at rosemond.com

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