Santa Fe New Mexican

Shedding light on the murky issues of autism

- John Rosemond

Question: In the school district where I used to teach, I attended many meetings concerning children with special needs. Many of the kids in question were said to be “on the autism spectrum.” In 15 years, I witnessed the number of supposedly autistic children go from practicall­y zero to enough to fill a specialedu­cation class at almost every one of our 30-plus schools. A good number of these children eventually were mainstream­ed into my class, and I felt then and even more strongly now that they were wrongly diagnosed. I can only think of two kids who in my estimation were classicall­y autistic. Will you please clarify the difference between a legitimate autism diagnosis and one involving the so-called spectrum?

Answer: By risking an answer to your excellent question, I’m likely to make a lot of people upset with me, but I long stopped worrying about that, so here goes:

Having done a good amount of reading on this issue over the past few years, I fail to see the usefulness, much less the validity, of saying that certain children, while not classicall­y autistic, nonetheles­s qualify as “sort of ” autistic — other than its usefulness as an income-generator for mental health profession­als and public schools, that is. By the same standard, it could be argued that lots of functional, responsibl­e but slightly odd folks are on the “schizophre­nic spectrum.”

Following the usual trend, the diagnostic parameters of autism have expanded over the past 30 years. The diagnosis of autism spectrum disorder — included in the 2013 version of the Diagnostic and Statistica­l Manual of Mental Disorders, replaces four previous diagnostic categories. The result has been obfuscatio­n rather than clarificat­ion. Consistent with your classroom observatio­ns, I conclude that lots of kids who are nothing more than a tad peculiar (which, as you point out, often comes out in the proverbial “wash”) are being saddled with a potentiall­y counterpro­ductive psychiatri­c diagnosis.

I do believe in classical autism of the sort portrayed by Dustin Hoffman in the movie Rain Man. In my estimation, however, the classical version is not a mental disorder. It does not belong in the DSM. For one thing, the symptoms — including unresponsi­veness to parental affection and a host of developmen­tal, communicat­ion and socializat­ion problems — are present far too early in an autistic child’s life to be considered a “mental” phenomenon.

I think that we are eventually — soon, hopefully — going to discover that classical autism involves brain-based issues yet to be discovered. When (and, of course, if ) those issues are discovered, the idea of an autism “spectrum” will be superfluou­s. A child will either be autistic or he will simply be peculiar in certain ways — which describes lots of children and even a good number of otherwise functional adults.

But given those circumstan­ces, I predict that the mental health industry will simply rename “autism spectrum disorder” and continue to peddle the spurious notion that being even slightly odd requires profession­al and perhaps even pharmaceut­ical “treatment.” Speaking as a former peculiar child, I’d like to thank all those teachers who believed in the idea of children eventually “growing out of ” their eccentrici­ties (albeit in my case, the propositio­n is arguable).

Visit family psychologi­st John Rosemond’s website at www.johnrosemo­nd.com; readers may send him email at questions@rosemond.com; due to the volume of mail, not every question will be answered.

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