MC1729 wrote:
So I was diagnosed with autism/Asperger's a few months ago (I was diagnosed after all PDDs were grouped into ASD, but the clinician said it would have been Asperger's by the previous DSM), but I just got the full report on all my mental conditions (I was diagnosed after a battery of extensive psychological testing) and learned I was diagnosed with ASD Level 2 instead of 1... I am pretty high functioning, and thought that ASD levels were the same as levels of functioning (e.g. Level 1 was more Asperger's/HFA, Level 2 was more moderate, and Level 3 was low-functioning/"classical" autism), but I guess I am wrong. From what I gathered on the report, Level 2 means "requiring substantial support", and I do need support when it comes to functioning in school and living independently, and I had some support in elementary and middle school when it came to speech and social skills (even though I was undiagnosed in terms of autism). But I guess I just thought Level 2 meant moderate autistic disorder when I'm more in the Asperger's category, but it seems to be more dependent on how much support you need. So hypothetically, you could fall into the Asperger's range but be Level 3, though not really the other way around. I think this is why it's important to defer to the professionals and be cautious about diagnosing yourself, because in the end the professionals know more than you when it comes to diagnosis (for the most part, I was misdiagnosed as bipolar when I am very clearly not bipolar), even though you know yourself best. I am not a professional by any means, just a psychology student, so I definitely don't know everything about autism diagnosis (though it is one of my special interests).
Yeah basically if you can not live independently then it falls under significant support. There are other things that lend towards level 2 though. Maybe stuff you do not pick up on, but they did. Sometimes people with autism are not good at assessing themselves in regard to how they are viewed by others, especially professionals. I have traits that I am not self aware of, but others are aware of them.