Bethie wrote:
Um...correct me if I'm wrong...
isn't Aspergers a mild TYPE of Autism?
Why do they call it a spectrum if they're only going to recognize three or four specific points on it? </rhetorical question>
Asperger's is on the autism spectrum, and is commonly referred to as a "mild" form of autism based mostly on stereotypical behaviors, and by comparing extreme examples. I am diagnosed AS, and my particular issues are disabling - not "mild".
Since autism is a spectrum, and where one falls on that spectrum varies over time, any label will not be accurate for long, and may not be useful at all in a practical sense. Services for any individual should be determined by which the issues a particular individual is having difficulty with. Labeling a spectrum individual as Fixed Point X and providing a generic set of services whether or not they apply to that particular individual is neither logical nor helpful.
azurecrayon wrote:
i think the therapist is differentiating between aspergers disorder and autistic disorder, which are separate disorders but are both under the umbrella of autism spectrum disorders. while aspergers is often called a mild form of autism, that can be incorrect as the difference between the two can be as simple as delayed language acquisition and they can be indistinguishable once language is acquired.
her error is in thinking that one can fit only criteria for one. while technically that is true, it is only true because one criteria for aspergers is that the individual does not fit the criteria for any other asd. so one can fit the observational criteria for both, but not fit the aspergers further criteria of not fitting criteria for another asd. someone in that situation should therefore be diagnosed autism disorder and not aspergers disorder.
and i, too, will be thankful when this kind of thing is in the past heh.
Yes, I look forward to a day when I and all spectrum kind are seen as human beings, not a "disorder" or, worse, a "disease".