1 / 16

Puzzling girls

Puzzling girls. Rachel Brooks. What are the questions?. Are we missing girls with ASD? How do we diagnose them? Does it matter if they are missed?. Prevelance. ASD 0.6 -1% Male : Female 3-4 : 1 (school aged children population cohorts) 5-14 : 1 in clinical settings

kacia
Download Presentation

Puzzling girls

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Puzzling girls Rachel Brooks

  2. What are the questions? • Are we missing girls with ASD? • How do we diagnose them? • Does it matter if they are missed?

  3. Prevelance • ASD 0.6 -1% • Male : Female 3-4 : 1 (school aged children population cohorts) 5-14 : 1 in clinical settings (6:1 (ish) for our tertiary clinic) • Suggests girls with low normal to above normal IQ are not being diagnosed

  4. ASD and the Extreme Male Brain • Simon Baron-Cohen • Postulates that the ASD brain is an extreme of the male brain • Females with ASD have a more male brain than those without ASD • Foetal testosterone? • X and Y linked theories?

  5. Why else ? • Girls are more motivated to learn to conform socially and have better imitation skills to ‘pretend to be normal’ • Diagnostic instruments are unable to detect more subtle ways ASD presents in females

  6. Are neuro typical girls and boys intrinsically different? • Baron-Cohen would say so, boys are systemisers, girls are empathisers • Wing – general population females better language skills, poorer visuo-spacial and maths skills • Girls better at decoding facial expressions and non verbal cues, empathising and theory of mind

  7. Girls build relationships by sharing thoughts and emotions • Boys build relationships on object/activity related themes • Girls world is definitely different to boy world!

  8. Diagnostic instruments • All designed to pick up ASD and calibrated for the original male phenotype of ASD • Girls with ASD may not be picked up by current screening and diagnostic tools • Little research in this area

  9. ASSQ-REV • Lack of a best friend B>G • Interacts mostly with younger children G>B

  10. ASSQ-REV • Avoids demands G>B Why? Parents less demanding of boys? Girls with ASD may meet criteria for PDA Higher co-morbid anxiety in girls Girls avoid passively (ignore, etc,) and this is effective

  11. ASSQ-REV • Has a different voice /speech G>B • Not robotic • Unusual, high pitched, hoarse childish

  12. ASSQ-REV • Carefree or over meticulous with physical appearance and dress • Difficulties completing daily activities because of compulsive repetitions

  13. Girls special interests • Animals, foreign cultures, fairy tale figures, famous people, comic strip personalities • Painting , pottery, collecting, reading, beauty products, clothes • Horse riding, • Ice dancing

  14. Play and imagination • Is it imagination or re-enactment? • There may be a script • The girl needs to be in control

  15. Kopp and Gillberg 2010 A girl who • Avoids demands • Is very determined • Who interacts (mostly) with younger children • Who is carefree or over meticulous with physical appearance and dress • Who acts or lives different parts (animals, TV stars) • Who had a different voice or speech • Who often has intense girl-oriented interests

  16. Risks of non identification • Bullying • Vulnerability • Depression, • Negative self perception • Self harm • Anorexia (18-23% of girls with anorexia also present with signs of Asperger syndrome – Gillberg and Billstedt, 2000)

More Related