Larson et al Reference Larson, Wagner, Jones, Tantam, Meng-Chuan and Baron-Cohen1 report on a major study on psychosis in autism, which is an important topic. Reference Fitzgerald2 They point out that their sample is non-representative, but then use the Autism Diagnostic Interview-Revised (ADI-R) and Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule (ADOS) for clinical diagnosis. This vastly increases the non-representativeness of the sample unnecessarily and takes it a very long way away from autism in the general population. The criteria they used to define autism are very narrow concepts of the disorder. Clinical diagnoses based on this narrow view tell us very little about autism as seen in routine clinical practice, where professionals throughout the world now accept that the broader autism phenotype. I see many parents who come to me in great distress knowing that their child has autism and that the school also observed this, but having been told that their child did not have autism according to the ADI-R. This instrument is not appropriate to making a sole diagnosis of autism in clinical practice. It not uncommonly misses high-functioning autism. In addition, Ventola et al Reference Ventola, Kleinman, Pandey, Barton, Allen and Greene3 have shown that the ADI-R was significantly ‘under-diagnosing toddlers’. How biased and unrepresentative the patients in this survey can be seen by Professor Gillian Baird's work on autism in the general population. Reference Baird, Simonoff, Pickles, Chandler, Loucast Meldrum and Charman4 Indeed, using these narrow criteria gives a prevalence of autism of 25 per 10 000. When you use the broader autism spectrum, you get a truer rate of 116 per 10 000. One of the problems also is that the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) guidelines on the diagnosis of autism, 5 which are accepted throughout the world, are not followed. These state that there is no specific instrument recommended for diagnosis of autism and that identification depends on a clinical diagnosis by an experienced clinician. Dorothy Bishop, Professor of Developmental Neuropsychology at the University of Cambridge, told Adam Feinstein that, ‘If it could be shown that there were real benefits in accuracy of diagnosis from adopting this lengthy procedure, then I'd be happy to say: “Okay”. But the originators of the instrument have never demonstrated [this] – it is really more an article of faith with them’. Reference Feinstein6 Feinstein also reports that, at the prestigious International Meeting for Autism in London in 2009, senior autism researchers ‘lambasted’ these narrow instruments ‘for missing many cases of autism’.
Crossref Citations
This article has been cited by the following publications. This list is generated based on data provided by Crossref.
Michael, Fitzgerald
2018.
The broader autism phenotype: expanding the clinical gestalt of autism and broadening DSM V criteria of autism spectrum disorder.
Journal of Psychology & Clinical Psychiatry,
Vol. 9,
Issue. 3,
Sankey, Carol
Derguy, Cyrielle
Clément, Céline
Ilg, Jennifer
and
Cappe, Émilie
2019.
Supporting Parents of a Child with Autism Spectrum Disorder: The French Awakening.
Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders,
Vol. 49,
Issue. 3,
p.
1142.
Fitzgerald, Michael
2021.
Autism Spectrum Disorder - Profile, Heterogeneity, Neurobiology and Intervention.
Davidson, Claire
Moran, Heather
and
Minnis, Helen
2022.
Autism and attachment disorders – how do we tell the difference?.
BJPsych Advances,
Vol. 28,
Issue. 6,
p.
371.
Salhi, Intissar
Qbadou, Mohammed
Gouraguine, Soukaina
Mansouri, Khalifa
Lytridis, Chris
and
Kaburlasos, Vassilis
2022.
Towards Robot-Assisted Therapy for Children With Autism—The Ontological Knowledge Models and Reinforcement Learning-Based Algorithms.
Frontiers in Robotics and AI,
Vol. 9,
Issue. ,
Proskurnina, Elena
Portnova, Galina
Ivanova, Maria
and
Sokolova, Svetlana
2022.
Chemiluminescence analysis of saliva for the assessment of emotional stress in autistic children undergoing a medical examination.
Advances in Autism,
Vol. 8,
Issue. 4,
p.
332.
Salhi, Intissar
Gouraguine, Soukaina
Qbadou, Mohammed
and
Mansouri, Khalifa
2022.
A Socially Assistive Robot Therapy for Pedagogical Rehabilitation of Autistic Learners.
p.
1.
Kochhar, Puja
Arora, Iti
Bellato, Alessio
Ropar, Danielle
Hollis, Chris
and
Groom, Madeleine (Maddie) J.
2024.
A comparison of visual attention to pictures in the Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule in children and adolescents with ADHD and/or autism.
Frontiers in Psychiatry,
Vol. 15,
Issue. ,
eLetters
No eLetters have been published for this article.