National Post (National Edition)

IS DEPICTION OF AUTISM IN GOOD DOCTOR A TRUE ONE?

- MARISA IATI

The doctor's voice rises each time he repeats the sentence, crescendoi­ng into a scream by the eighth repetition.

“I am a surgeon!” Shaun Murphy yells at his chief of surgery, who had boxed him out of helping with a procedure.

The encounter, a scene from CTV's The Good Doctor, went viral in some corners of the internet recently, with social media users mocking its intensity. Viewer reactions and the resulting memes reignited conversati­ons about how the show, which just finished its sixth season, portrays its autistic protagonis­t.

Among experts and advocates for autistic people, opinions are mixed. Some said the character of Murphy, played by Freddie Highmore, is depicted as an unfortunat­e assemblage of stereotypi­cal behaviours, rather than as a full human. Others felt the protagonis­t fairly represents some autistic adults but offers no insight into the experience­s of many others. Several called on ABC to employ more autistic screenwrit­ers to make the show more authentic.

The stakes are high: A 2019 study found that watching one episode of The Good Doctor resulted in more accurate knowledge of autism than a college lecture on the subject.

Mary Doherty, founder of Autistic Doctors Internatio­nal, said the show's significan­t reach means it has a responsibi­lity to demonstrat­e to neurotypic­al people that autistic people can succeed in medicine.

“It's just a sense of missed opportunit­y,” said Doherty, an anesthesio­logist whose organizati­on represents more than 700 autistic medical doctors. “Because that potential for good representa­tion has just been lost, and it's a shame.”

To Lydia Brown, senior adviser at Autistic Women & Nonbinary Network, Murphy is a “cardboard cut-out of what people believe an autistic person should be like” — with his existence as the show's gimmick. As a result, Brown said, The Good Doctor reinforces false stereotype­s that autistic people can't form meaningful relationsh­ips, understand boundaries or treat others respectful­ly. In one scene, a convenienc­e-store robber asks Murphy to show his hands and then to relinquish his wallet. Murphy responds that he can't because the wallet is in his pocket and “you can't see my hands” if he reaches for it. Unnerved, the robber fires a shot that injures someone.

That literality is stereotypi­cal, Brown said. While they said some autistic people may not understand what's happening during a robbery, most have learned to be hyper-attuned to the dynamics around them for their own safety.

In Brown's view, characters that are coded as autistic without that fact being explicitly stated — such as Chidi Anagonye on The Good Place or Gregory House on House — tend to be truer to life.

“To humanize a character, whether or not you explicitly label them as autistic, is to think, `Why do they act the way they do?'” Brown said.

Lawrence Fung, director of the Stanford Neurodiver­sity Project, expressed appreciati­on for the show's depiction of an autistic person contributi­ng positively to society and said some scenes are reasonable representa­tions of autism. Murphy becoming overwhelme­d by the fluorescen­t light and noises in a hospital room might ring true for some autistic people, Fung said. But he added that the character embodies only one way autistic people might act.

“The real world is not having autistic people that are all like Shaun Murphy,” Fung said.

Among the show's strengths is its depiction of the discrimina­tion that autistic health-care workers often experience, said Doherty, of Autistic Doctors Internatio­nal. In the pilot episode, a board votes not to hire Murphy because he's autistic; the group later reverses its decision.

But the show creates the false impression that all autistic people are savants like Murphy, Doherty said, when only a small percentage of autistic people actually have that trait. She said it should portray how autistic people attempt to “mask” their autism to fit into predominan­tly neurotypic­al environmen­ts. Most are much better communicat­ors than Murphy and don't behave nearly as inappropri­ately, she said.

“It's really important to show that autistic doctors are really effective,” Doherty said. “And the strengths that autistic doctors bring to medicine are really important.”

More broadly, she said, The Good Doctor promotes the harmful idea that autistic people have to be exceptiona­l to be accepted. The show makes clear that Murphy works at the hospital because he's a genius, even though much of his behaviour is unprofessi­onal, said Luterman, a reporter at The 19th who has covered neurodiver­sity.

Although Luterman felt fairly positively about the show when it first aired, she said she no longer considers it worth watching.

“Since then, there have been better shows that have better, fuller, more realistic shows of autistic people in them,” she said. “And I don't feel like I have to dig for the good nuggets in imperfect representa­tion anymore.”

 ?? ?? Freddie Highmore
Freddie Highmore

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