The Guardian article on female underdiagnosis
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Thousands of autistic girls and women 'going undiagnosed' due to gender bias
Prof Francesca Happé, director of the Social, Genetic & Developmental Psychiatry Centre at King’s College London, warned that the failure to recognise autism in girls and women was taking a stark toll on their mental health.
“We’ve overlooked autism in women and girls and I think there’s a real gender equality issue here,” she said. “I think we are missing large numbers and misdiagnosing them too.”
However, there is growing evidence that the number of girls and women with the condition may have been vastly underestimated. Recent research, based on active screening rather than clinical or school records, found a ratio of 3:1. Happé and others believe this could fall further – potentially to as low as 2:1 – as diagnostic processes become better tailored to identifying autism in girls and women.
Due to early assumptions about autism mostly affecting men, studies have often recruited male-only cohorts. Male participants in brain imaging studies on autism outnumber females by eight to one, and in earlier research the bias was even more pronounced.
“This means that what we think we know about autism from research is actually just what we know about male autism,” said Happé, who has a £500,000 grant to investigate gender differences in autism spectrum disorders.
More recent work suggests there may be subtle differences in how autism presents in girls and women. Narrow special interests may superficially appear more mainstream (horses or boybands, say, rather than electricity pylons) – although the nature of the interest would still be unusual in terms of persistence and narrowness.
Autistic girls and women also tend to be more adept at masking their autistic traits. “They might pick a popular girl in their class or workplace and study them and copy them,” said Happé.
The idea that autism could be a result of having an “extreme male brain” due to hormone differences has dominated popular narratives about the biology driving the condition, although Happé said that the theory remained scientifically contentious. Media portrayals of autism, such as the movie Rain Man, have also been almost exclusively male. So parents, teachers and clinicians tend to be less inclined to consider autism as a likely explanation for girls and women struggling with social and communication problems than with boys and men.
The failure to diagnose autism is of concern because many of those affected experience secondary mental health issues such as anxiety, depression and self-harm. A small study last year found that 23% of women hospitalised for anorexia met the diagnostic criteria for autism. More work is needed to confirm the findings, which were based on 60 women, and to gauge whether the women’s social and communication difficulties predated their eating disorder.
“If clinicians don’t have autism in mind when they see an eating disorder, they stop there,” Happé said. Many people find a diagnosis helpful in making sense of why they feel “different” and in finding acceptance and understanding from family and friends.
The NHS estimates there are about 700,000 people on the autism spectrum in the UK, based on a roughly 10:1 gender ratio. If the real ratio were shown to be 3:1, this would suggest that up to 200,000 girls and women with autism have been omitted from the national tally.
Carol Povey, director of the National Autistic Society’s Centre for Autism, said there was growing recognition of the issue, with a steady increase in referrals of women and girls to specialist diagnostic centres during the past few years.
“Recent research suggests that the number of males and females on the autism spectrum is far more equal than previously thought and diagnostic statistics suggest,” she said. “The problem is that professionals often don’t understand the different ways autism can manifest in women and girls, with many going through their lives without a diagnosis and an understanding of why they feel different.”
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DSM 5: Autism Spectrum Disorder, DSM IV: Aspergers Moderate Severity
“My autism is not a superpower. It also isn’t some kind of god-forsaken, endless fountain of suffering inflicted on my family. It’s just part of who I am as a person”. - Sara Luterman
They've given her half a million pounds. I got a 21 page booklet.
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ASPartOfMe
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Bustle similar article. Bustle is an online magazine targeted to millennial women that gets 50 million hits a month
How 3 Autistic Women Dealt With Delayed Diagnosis — And The Sexism They Faced Along The Way
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Professionally Identified and joined WP August 26, 2013
DSM 5: Autism Spectrum Disorder, DSM IV: Aspergers Moderate Severity
“My autism is not a superpower. It also isn’t some kind of god-forsaken, endless fountain of suffering inflicted on my family. It’s just part of who I am as a person”. - Sara Luterman
I'm happy that people are trying to help women and getting diagnosed but I don't think these articles are going to help much because they both avoid the thing that doctors look for in mental illnesses: Whether the disorder is significant enough to lead to life or death situations.
When doctors are diagnosing people it's to save them from themselves, it's not about "why I'm different" or "acceptance and understanding", it's about preventing you from getting in situations that will end up with you in a graveyard.
These articles are too vague and don't give any examples of situations that could have been life-threatening. For example: There was a guy we knew living not too far from us and came to our door asking if he could come in. He wanted to come in because the cops were looking for him. Now if my mother wasn't home I might have let him in because to me he didn't seem like a bad person(which could have lead to me being dead or severely injured if I was wrong.) My mother did not let him in. I have more situations throughout life that could have lead to my death without anyone supporting me. They need to present more information like above, then it would be easier to make the connection.
If you are fighting for identity or self-acceptance or understanding from others then you are fighting for the diagnosis for all the wrong reasons. Autism has nothing to do with gender or self-acceptance or understanding, it's so in social situations you won't mistakingly end up getting yourself killed.
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Autism is a disorder not a personality trait!
"God grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change,
Courage to change the things I can,
and Wisdom to know the difference."
I agree with AquaineBay. The one area that stands out to me is that of the teenage girl Aspies being predated upon by sexual predators. I can only offer my own anecdotal story, but I have a feeling it is sadly a very common one. I was never diagnosed in my early life but was examined by a psychiatrist when I was 13. He found me to be very intelligent, naive, but for some reason manipulative and sly. These last two are a complete mystery to me, I have a strong moral compass and although I am a human being and not perfectly truthful 100% of the time (sure you look nice in that...I was late because I had a phone call...that sort of thing) I am not a manipulative person. What they didn't get a grasp of was that I was the victim of (horrific) sexual abuse but they decided I had low morals and should be locked up for 2 years. Anyway, that was then, maybe society has moved on a bit from victim blaming.
I have digressed somewhat. What my point is that many many girls on the spectrum have awful abuse because we cannot read the signals and get the hell away from the predatory male (or female in some cases), and that successive abuses make us fall victim again and again because of the freeze and friend (or fawn) reflex that sets in. So what happens is that a whole lot of other problems come in. Addiction, PTSD, eating disorders, depression and suicide, etc etc, so no-one ever gets down to the nitty gritty of underlying autism.
I think also from my cursory knowledge (newly diagnosed and reading madly to catch up) that female autism does present itself differently, more research needs to be done. More needs to be done to diagnose girls earlier and set up strategies to protect them from the extremely harmful effects of falling victim. And no I am not suggesting the victim should 'do more'. I am advocating that the adults should 'do more' and be more vigilant.
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AQ 40
ASD-1
@feeli0
Thank you for being so open about your experience and for bringing this important topic to light. As a fellow abuse victim I'm sending you no-contact (but full affection) hugs and high fives for your bravery through this nightmare. Stats do show that autistic people (in particular females but all genders) are common targets for exploitative and predatory crime such as we endured. It's sickening and horrific but it's true. Add the rampant misdiagnosis of female autism and women, *especially young or more inexperienced women* , become prime targets for the crazed who dwell on human suffering. I will PM you more but thank you again. You are my rock and pillar
Is
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