Dear NCSA community,
In October, NCSA published its position statement calling for categorical recognition of severe autism in the DSM. We emphasized the irrationality of an ASD diagnostic label that includes both "a young man with no language, a low IQ, few functional abilities, and aggressive, dangerous behaviors" as well as "a college professor with social anxieties and some OCD."
This galactic overbreadth subverts the essential purpose of psychiatric diagnostic labels: to describe a group of patients afflicted by a consistent set of impairments for the ultimate purpose of guiding meaningful interventions, services, and research.
We are hardly the only voices decrying the DSM-5's nonsensical scheme. And today a prestigious commission from The Lancet endorsed the use of the term “profound autism” to distinguish and support individuals who have high dependency needs and are likely to need 24-hour care throughout their lives.
Below are commentaries on this direction from NCSA board members Alison Singer, Amy Lutz and Jill Escher.
We are excited to see a larger movement toward a diagnostic scheme that reflects the realities and needs of this population, which includes some of the most devastatingly disabled patients in the entire field of psychiatry — and who must no longer be hidden in a category increasingly associated with "differences" and "strengths."
—NCSA
Labels can harm, but they also can help: See ‘profound autism’
From Stat News
By Alison Singer
Labels are a divisive subject. When used inappropriately, they have the power to misrepresent and dehumanize people. As the mother of a child with autism, I have seen numerous instances in which hurtful or inaccurate labels have been applied to my daughter. Yet there are times when using accurate labels can dramatically improve the lives of those with autism. The specific label I’m thinking of is “profound autism” — and it’s one being embraced by an increasing number of autism researchers and advocates.
On Monday, The Lancet published a special report by The Lancet Commission on the Future of Care and Clinical Research in Autism, of which I am a member. In the report, several colleagues and I introduce the term profound autism to highlight the needs of people who cannot speak for themselves.
The term profound autism is intended to describe autistic people who are likely to need 24-hour support throughout their lives. The goal of introducing this designation is to provide more specificity to the extremely broad autism spectrum to equip parents, service providers, and the public with the language necessary to ensure that individuals with autism receive the accommodations and interventions they need. Concise, meaningful terms like profound autism will simplify the process of determining appropriate care, leading to quicker and more forceful interventions....
This muddle has had catastrophic consequences for those who, like my son Jonah, fall under the category of profound autism. Not only has their exclusion from research been well-documented, but their policy needs and preferences have been eclipsed by those of high-functioning autistic self-advocates who have spearheaded the ongoing fight to close the intensive, disability-specific settings that are often most appropriate for those who struggle with aggression, self-injury, and elopement. As the Commission noted, the most affected population is "at risk of being marginalized by a focus on more able individuals."... Read more
Lancet Commission Calls for New Category: "Profound Autism"
Pressure mounts to split the broad autism diagnosis created by the DSM-5.
By Amy Lutz, in Psychology Today
Yesterday, the Lancet Commission on the future of care and clinical research on autism — a group of 32 researchers, clinicians, family members, and self-advocates from around the world — released a comprehensive 64-page report detailing changes that should be made over the next five years to improve the quality of life of autistic people and their families.
Besides a common-sense call for individualized, incrementalized, evidence-based interventions, one of the Commission’s key recommendations is to carve out the most impaired section of the spectrum and give it its own label of “profound autism,” which would include autistic individuals who also have significant intellectual disability (IQ below 50), minimal or no language, and who require round-the-clock supervision and assistance with activities of daily living. The Commission expresses “hope that [the introduction of “profound autism”] will spur both the clinical and research global communities to prioritise the needs of this vulnerable and underserved group of autistic individuals.”... Read more
Podcast interview calls out absurdity of over-broad autism spectrum
Thanks to Mary Barbera for hosting NCSA President Jill Escher on her latest podcast episode. In addition to the failings of autism diagnostics they discuss new directions for autism research, exponentially increasing autism rates, NCSA, and national autism policy (or lack thereof). Listen in
Have an opinion about breaking up the autism spectrum? Join the conversation on NCSA's very active Facebook page.
See NCSA's position statement on the need for categorical recognition of severe autism in the DSM.