New Autism Spectrum Disorder (NASD) in DSM-5:

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sinsboldly
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11 Apr 2010, 2:15 am

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New Autism Spectrum Disorder (NASD) in DSM-5: Autism Minus Intellectual Disability

Opinion by AutismRealityNB
(2 Days Ago) in Health / Autism

The CDC web site introduces Autism Spectrum Disorders with some basic autism facts, including facts about Autistic Disorder and Intellectual Disability, which are being ignored by the American Psychiatric Association in its proposed revisions to the Pervasive Developmental Disorders (which will now formally be called Autism Spectrum Disorder) section of the DSM-5. One simple, but very important, fact which the APA will hide is the fact that many people with Autistic Disorder, the classic "autism", also have an Intellectual Disability.

It is these people with Autistic Disorder and Intellectual Disability who have the most severe symptoms. They will not typically author internet blogs, preside over corporate boards, conduct research, hold media interviews or mingle with Washington DC politicians and bureaucrats. Those diagnosed today with Aspergers and mild PDD-NOS will be the faces of the New Autism Spectrum Disorder in the DSM 5 a transition which is already well underway with the Hollywood, the Mainstream Media and, in President Obama's administration, appointment of a hard line anti autism cure person with high functioning Aspergers to a high profile disability council position. The classic instances of Autistic Disorder with Intellectual Disability will be fully excluded from the New Autism Spectrum Disorder.

From the CDC's basic autism facts page:

"ASDs are “spectrum disorders.” That means ASDs affect each person in different ways, and can range from very mild to severe. People with ASDs share some similar symptoms, such as problems with social interaction. But there are differences in when the symptoms start, how severe they are, and the exact nature of the symptoms.

Autistic Disorder (also called “classic” autism)
This is what most people think of when hearing the word “autism.” People with autistic disorder usually have significant language delays, social and communication challenges, and unusual behaviors and interests. Many people with autistic disorder also have intellectual disability.

Asperger Syndrome
People with Asperger syndrome usually have some milder symptoms of autistic disorder. They might have social challenges and unusual behaviors and interests. However, they typically do not have problems with language or intellectual disability.

Pervasive Developmental Disorder – Not Otherwise Specified (PDD-NOS; also called "atypical autism") People who meet some of the criteria for autistic disorder or Asperger syndrome, but not all, may be diagnosed with PDD-NOS. People with PDD-NOS usually have fewer and milder symptoms than those with autistic disorder. The symptoms might cause only social and communication challenges.

The CDC statement that "many people with autistic disorder also have intellectual disability" is consistent with other authorities and studies including the Canadian Psychological Association 2006 brief to the Canadian Senate which stated that "Cognitive impairment is present in about 80% of persons diagnosed with Autism and general intellectual functioning is most often below average".

The CPA reference to autism excludes Aspergers which is referenced separately. The statement is also consistent with the CDC's 2009 studies which found that "Data show a similar proportion of children with an ASD, also had signs of intellectual disability averaging 44% in 2004 and 41% in 2006".


The APA is of the view that the Pervasive Developmental Disorders should be grouped into one Autism Spectrum Disorder, nominally distinguished on grounds of severity of symptoms. In fact though the intellectual disability which characterizes many instances of Autistic Disorder, of "classic" autism, will be separated from the Autism Spectrum which will also reduce its focus to "social communication" and "fixated interests and repetitive behaviors". Significant language delays will not be major diagnostic criteria for the New Autism Spectrum Disorder in the APA's Brave New DSM 5. There will be no reference, even by necessary implication to Intellectual Disability in the DSM-5's New Autism Spectrum Disorder.

It is easy to speculate about the reasons motivating the APA in seeking to remove the Intellectually Disabled, low functioning, classically autistic from the New Autism Spectrum Disorder (NASD). The NASD will make it impossible to use epidemiological studies to demonstrate any vaccine autism connections since the very definition of autism will have changed ... once again. This will come in handy after the use of thimerosal laced vaccines in many areas during the great 2009 Swine Flu Panic.

Life will also be easier, and their consciences less ruffled, for those "clinical psychologists" and researchers who focus almost exclusively on working with persons with High Functioning Autism and Aspergers. On the research side those High Functioning Autism experts like Dr. Laurent Mottron who has published dozens of research papers involving subjects with High Functioning Autism, Aspergers and Savant qualities will now be able to truly claim to be autism experts without anyone mocking them for their obvious reluctance to study low functioning, intellectually disabled, severely autistic subjects.

Clinical psychologists will find their success rates working with autistic subjects soaring when their autistic subjects all carry the New Autism Spectrum Disorder diagnosis. Those more difficult low functioning autism cases will be relegated to the dustbins of history ... and forgotten completely in residential and institutional care facilities. Clinical utility takes on a whole new dimension in the era of the New Autism Spectrum Disorder.

It will also be handy for the Ari Ne'eman's and other very high functioning persons with Aspergers who will now be able to speak with at least a little bit of credibility on behalf of persons with the New Autism Spectrum Disorder. This is a wish granted for Ari Ne'eman, Amanda Baggs, Michelle Dawson and Alex Plank. These persons with HFA and Aspergers are high profile opponents of attempts to cure people, even other people's children, of their autism disorders. Cementing their status as spokespersons for the New Autism Spectrum Disorder will take some pressure off of the health authorities, including psychiatrists, and "autism" researchers who do not want to spend their time and resources seeking cures for autism disorders.


In the Brave New World of the DSM-5 everyone will be happy except the severely disabled, low functioning persons with Autistic Disorder and Intellectual Disability, the "classic" autistics ... and the parents and family members who are the only ... the ONLY ... ones fighting on their behalf. Members of the APA will be busy slapping each other on the back and congratulating themselves for solving the Autism Crisis in the way they know best ... by defining it away.


The New Autism Spectrum Disorder has arrived.


http://www.opposingviews.com/i/new-auti ... disability


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Bluefins
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11 Apr 2010, 2:26 am

That's just some other site. Misleading title, I thought it was actual news on the DSM-V.



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11 Apr 2010, 2:31 am

Interesting to see opinions from the other side. But how do they know it will actually happen? It's just like those clinging onto their AS diagnosis. How do they know what they're saying will actually come to pass?

Basically I see the DSM change because AS is so over diagnosed and this just narrows it down so people that have real problems with an ASD can get diagnosed and helped.
How do they know that those with intellectual problems will be forgotten about?
This is all just assumption.

And did they say Amanda Baggs was HFA? I must have been watching the wrong videos.


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11 Apr 2010, 4:08 am

I do not consider myself an expert, but I have read quite a few articles and books on autism. From what I have read, language delay and "IQ" tests have not been empirically proven to be diagnosable symptoms. The language delay in "HFA" in the DSM-IV was not considered consistent or scientific, and that is why it is gone. A person with "LFA" can score significantly high marks on an IQ test. I do not understand what the author wants, other than they are in severe denial, and want a cure. If anything, the DSM-V updates seems rushed, if anything they need to find a chromosonal or genetic indicator and get autism out of the DSM.



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11 Apr 2010, 8:22 am

Has anyone seen CNN's "Autism is a World"? Whoever wrote this article should watch it. It's about a girl with classic autism, almost completely non-verbal, stunted growth, and is basically everyone's idea of autism. But it goes beyond that--she is extremely intelligent and at the time of filming the documentary, she was going to college to get her degree in history. She had a device she carried around with a keypad, a screen, and one of those electronic voices so she could talk to people. Although she could only say a few words vocally (yes, no, okay), when she typed what she wanted say, she had very sophisticated language with a large vocabulary.

Even those who have classic autism or "LFA," often do not have "intelligence disability." They may look strange, act strange, not be able to communicate in a proper way, but that does not mean they are disabled in the realm of intelligence.


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11 Apr 2010, 9:44 am

Misleading title, indeed. It's just an opinion piece. An opinion that lost every last bit of credibility to me just as soon as I saw the conspiracy theory crap oozing into it.

Outspoken aspies are not working in cahoots with the government to hide away big pharma's mistakes just so that we can be sure that those on the severe side of the spectrum (I will not speak of people by functioning labels, how demeaning) cannot get services. It's not a conspiracy. There never was an autism crisis. It's called acceptance, and treating people like they're humans, not some mistake. The author ought to try it sometime.



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11 Apr 2010, 1:15 pm

Wait a minute, we were already discussing this on that other topic... could a mod merge them?


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11 Apr 2010, 1:20 pm

I think that it's good, that we're going to be included in the DSM.


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11 Apr 2010, 1:21 pm

Callista wrote:
Wait a minute, we were already discussing this on that other topic... could a mod merge them?


I don't know. I'm not that type of a Mod. :lol:


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