kraftiekortie wrote:
I think diagnosis as a child is probably more doctor-led than adult diagnosis.
I agree with that, and go further by saying that child diagnosis is
school-led. When I tried to get some sense out of the UK NHS more than 10 years ago, I was told by the NHS psychiatrists that Asperger's/ADHD is a childhood condition, and is dealt with by the education/school authorities. They said it was outside the remit of the NHS, and they wouldn't even discuss it with me. That was despite the fact that there was at the time at least one NHS hospital (The Maudsley in South London), which had an Autism/Asperger's clinic.
At that time, there was lots of stuff coming out of North America about adult autism, and I think that the N. American medical profession is still leading the way. At the time, there was a handful of private 'consultants' in the UK who would happily test adults for ASD, but when I mentioned that fact to my GP the shutters came down in an instant with a resounding clang - the GP more or less stated that if I went for a private diagnosis, he would have me removed from his patient list.
I still know of no UK examples of a doctor being the first to suggest the possibility of ASD to an adult patient. I have to say that I have come around to believing that the UK NHS view is not unreasonable, given that we are still a long way short of a clinical understanding of autism, and we are even further away from the time when there will any kind of treatment for the condition. The NHS has better ways to spend its limited resources. But, having said that, it would be nice to think that undiagnosed adult ASD is, somewhere in the world, still the subject of ongoing research.