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ASPartOfMe
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15 Jun 2023, 8:47 am

Autism in Adulthood: Finding Out You’re Autistic in Later Life Can Be a Positive Experience

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According to research from the University of Bath and King’s College London, the age of autism diagnosis does not significantly affect an individual’s quality of life. Other factors, such as gender and additional mental health conditions, have a more substantial impact. This implies that personal circumstances play a more vital role in the quality of life of individuals with autism.

A groundbreaking study found that the age of autism diagnosis doesn’t significantly affect the quality of life of individuals with autism. The study underlines that an autism diagnosis’s impact varies from person to person, suggesting that individual factors should be prioritized.
According to research from the University of Bath and King’s College London, the age of autism diagnosis does not significantly affect an individual’s quality of life. Other factors, such as gender and additional mental health conditions, have a more substantial impact. This implies that personal circumstances play a more vital role in the quality of life of individuals with autism.

Receiving an autism diagnosis in your 20, 30s, 40s, 50s or even 60s may seem daunting, but a new study from psychologists in Bath and London finds that the link between the age at which someone gets diagnosed has little bearing on their quality of life.

So-called ‘late diagnosis’ for autism has hit the headlines recently thanks to autism campaigner Christine McGuiness. Whereas autism is usually diagnosed in childhood, it is increasing being diagnosed in adults and especially among women.

Parents often wonder if their child finding out they are autistic earlier or later will have an impact on their lives in the long term. Whilst many people who discover they are autistic as adults wonder what life would have been like if they had found out earlier.

Against this backdrop, the new study – carried out by researchers at the University of Bath and King’s College London – is the first to examine whether the age at which one becomes aware of being autistic is linked to their quality of life, after accounting for other crucial factors such as household income.

The researchers asked 300 autistic adults to report the age at which they first learned they were autistic, as well as detailed information about their socio-demographic background such as current age, sex, ethnicity, relationship status, living status, education level, employment status, household income, and the presence of additional mental health conditions. Participants’ level of autistic personality traits was also measured.

Participants then completed questions on different aspects of their quality of life – including physical, psychological, social, and environmental aspects. For example, questions such as: “To what extent do you feel your life to be meaningful?” and “How satisfied are you with the support you get from your friends?”

The results – published on June 14 in the journal Autism found that the relationship between the age at which one becomes aware of being autistic and the different areas of quality of life was not statistically linked after considering other factors. In fact, other factors were more strongly linked to quality of life: Autistic women reported a better quality of life than autistic men, and people who had additional mental health conditions (e.g., anxiety) reported a lower quality of life.

Senior Research Fellow at the University of Bath and Lecturer in Psychology at King’s College London, Dr. Lucy Livingston, said: “More and more people are finding out they are autistic for the first time as an adult, which can be a life-changing realization. Because we know that many autistic people experience a very poor quality of life and well-being, this begs the question of whether finding out you are autistic earlier in life improves outcomes.

Our findings did not suggest this. For some people, finding out they are autistic sooner rather than later was linked to a better quality of life. For others, finding out later was better. Overall, there was no overall link between the age they found out and their quality of life.

“There could be many reasons for this. Getting an autism diagnosis does not always lead to any meaningful additional support, so it could be that autistic people who learn they are autistic at an earlier age did not necessarily experience a benefit to their life quality. Equally, a late diagnosis in adulthood can be a positive experience, helping people to make sense of themselves, which may improve their self-reported quality of life. The take-away message is that the impact of an autism diagnosis on someone’s quality of life is different for everyone. And there may be other, individual factors that are more important to focus on.”

Lead Researcher at the University of Bath, Dr. Florence Leung, added: “Our findings revealed that having more autistic personality characteristics – irrespective of when you learn you are autistic – was the strongest link to poor outcomes across all areas of quality of life. We are now following up on this finding to look more closely at how different autistic characteristics contribute to quality of life. This will be an important step towards establishing more tailored, more efficacious support for autistic people based on their specific autistic strengths and difficulties and self-evaluation of their quality of life.

“Additionally, being male and having additional mental health conditions was linked with poor quality of life. These observations highlight the importance of considering support strategies that are gender-specific to have a more targeted focus on improving autistic people’s mental health, to improve their life outcomes. There has understandably been quite a lot of discussion on autism and mental health in females in recent years but, based on these findings, we should not overlook the needs to autistic males who might also be struggling”.

underlining=mine:


Re-examining the association between the age of learning one is autistic and adult outcomes - Sage Journals June 14, 2023

This study counters the conventional wisdom the has led to a constant push to diagnose as early as possible. It conflates to we see on WP, a lot depends on individuals and their circumstances.


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Last edited by ASPartOfMe on 15 Jun 2023, 9:09 am, edited 2 times in total.

mrpieceofwork
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15 Jun 2023, 9:00 am

*screaming inside*


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Elgee
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16 Jun 2023, 10:53 pm

Had I been diagnosed years ago (siblings already knew it back then but didn't have the balls to suggest it to me), I might've found a man, may have even gotten married. Becauuse had I known way back then that the reason I was never able to get a man was that I was an Autistic looking among a field of NT men -- I would've joined autism dating sites and gotten involved in agencies that sponsor social events for "DD" people (which includes autistic), and quite possibly...at least improved my odds ... of finding a man to spend the rest of my life with.

Too late now. The only men who'd be interested in me, autistic or not, are my age or close to my age, and I am NOT interested in men my age, let alone older. Ewwwww.

I was at an autism agency the other day to explore the possibility of part time work. I enter the wing and this young guy is walking towards me with an odd gait. He was tall and handsome AF, but on the lower end of autism functioning. He gleefully smiled at me, great eye contact, and I found him SOOO charming. We passed each other. I sensed he was starng at me as I continued on, so I turned around, and sure enough, he had stopped in the hallway and was watching me with this big smile.

All 25 years of him. He symbolized what I COULD HAVE HAD, had I been diagnosed 30 earlier in adulthood.

I met a 57-year-old, homely autistic woman last year who said her boyfriend was 25. I thought, "Hmmm, maybe there's hope for me after all." Then I learn her boyfriend has clinical depression and is BLIND.

How many years left do I have? Well, not nearly as many as I had 25 years ago. It's better to finally find a community you belong to in early adulthood than in later adulthood. It can take years to find good friends. That's fine if you're 25!! Still plenty of youth time left!

A late diagnosis sucks. So I learn only late in life it's okay to be TRULY myself and be blunt AF.



bee33
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16 Jun 2023, 11:10 pm

Quote:
Getting an autism diagnosis does not always lead to any meaningful additional support, so it could be that autistic people who learn they are autistic at an earlier age did not necessarily experience a benefit to their life quality.
I think that's kind of the crux. We always hear that early diagnosis is important because then services can be made available, but often there just aren't any, especially for autistic adults/young-adults who get along fairly well in society and would benefit from more personalized and more nuanced interventions, like learning better social communication, which is like learning a complex dance that is always changing.

Also, self diagnosis exists for many other conditions. How often do you have to do your own research and then bring your ideas to the doctor (trying to present them tactfully because doctors are sometimes very vain...) to have them confirmed. That's not really self diagnosis once the doctor is involved, but the diagnosis still came originally from the patient.



autisticelders
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22 Jun 2023, 5:53 am

finally somebody said it "the majority of autistic people are adults" (paraphrase). I did not get services when I was diagnosed at age 68, but I did get answers to almost all the painful "whys" of the past. I did get self understanding, and found out that everything , after all, was not "all my fault". Self forgiveness and forgiveness of others has been very important to my mental health, and I am doing better than ever now almost 4 years since diagnosis. Its never too late. For me diagnosis has been healthy and healing, even without outside support /aid/ etc.


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Mona Pereth
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22 Jun 2023, 4:03 pm

Elgee wrote:
Too late now. The only men who'd be interested in me, autistic or not, are my age or close to my age, and I am NOT interested in men my age, let alone older. Ewwwww.

Don't say "only."

While the vast majority of heterosexual men are not attracted to women older than themselves, some exceptions do exist. My partner is 11 years younger than me.

Elgee wrote:
I met a 57-year-old, homely autistic woman last year who said her boyfriend was 25. I thought, "Hmmm, maybe there's hope for me after all." Then I learn her boyfriend has clinical depression and is BLIND.

My BF is not blind. He does have a history of clinical depression but it's largely under control now.

Anyhow, even though the younger men who would be attracted to you might be a small minority of younger men, there are a lot more men than women with autism diagnoses. The latter fact somewhat raises your odds of finding a compatible autistic man.

It's not too late for you to attend local autistic adult support groups and social groups, of both the peer-led and professional-led varieties. (Look around on Meetup.com, not just the "agencies" you are aware of.) Nor is it too late for you to try the various autistic dating sites/apps listed on this page.


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Greyeagle
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23 Jun 2023, 4:01 pm

I am 65 and didn't learn of my autism (Asperger's) till I was 64. I was extremely skeptical until I started researching Asperger's on my own. All the "aha" moments are too many to list. I had just figured I was a unique weirdo for 64 years. I had learned enough to fake normality well enough to stay employed, and have a few friends. My wife was the only person to ever "accuse" me of being on the spectrum. Now that I'm retired, I can just be me and stop worrying about faking normality.



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23 Jun 2023, 4:19 pm

My experience was a limbo.

A part of me could've chose my diagnosis in teenager years as positive.

Why didn't I listen to the unseen feeling and knowing that told me that 'yes! You're different! Enjoy it!'.

Yet this imbalanced puberty ridden body didn't, the damaged and bullied part of me who 'wanted to fight' thought it meant I'm fighting at the wrong side, the ignorant little sh*t thought all the discrimination and all the condemnation, then this emotionally and mentally part of myself have it as an excuse to hold me hostage, then the part of me who grew up poor is very worried about future prospects that I cannot afford THAT...

Apparently what convinced me was 'don't be a brat and don't use it as an excuse'.


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