Autism Spectrum Disorder Mnemonics (Memorable Psychiatry Lecture)

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  • Опубликовано: 12 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 84

  • @buttercxpdraws8101
    @buttercxpdraws8101 2 года назад +82

    I am autistic and I spoke, read and learnt to spell around age two. Speech delay is NOT a necessary symptom for an autism diagnosis. I’m fact, hyperlexia is increasingly recognised as a symptom of autism in females.

    • @MemorablePsych
      @MemorablePsych  2 года назад +36

      That's correct! As noted in the video, while speech delay is the most common reason for people to be referred for clinical evaluation, it is not required, as some people will have intact speech and instead present with deficits in social communication in other ways.

    • @sofitocyn100
      @sofitocyn100 2 года назад

      autism is being overdiagnosed!!! now it is said that it falls under a spectrum, just like bipolar and adhd. You should read the psychatrist Joel Paris' book about this issue.

    • @suddenlyautistic
      @suddenlyautistic 2 года назад +1

      Same here

    • @aurltimothy2780
      @aurltimothy2780 11 месяцев назад

      Same here I have thoughts of this situation like Austistic people never shout at the same thing of communication skills and comprehensions at the same time...

    • @DhhskkHehdis
      @DhhskkHehdis 10 месяцев назад

      There is a Dr that you can get in touch with Dr Oyalo on RUclips. Am excited to share about how his herbs works perfectly in reversing my son autism. now his speech has improved

  • @leylahuman2429
    @leylahuman2429 Год назад +30

    I think the most important thing to remember with autism is that the end goal is not to cure it, but to make society more accessible. -an autistic person

    • @DhhskkHehdis
      @DhhskkHehdis 10 месяцев назад

      There is a Dr that you can get in touch with Dr Oyalo on RUclips. Am excited to share about how his herbs works perfectly in reversing my son autism. now his speech has improved

    • @kaoskronostyche9939
      @kaoskronostyche9939 2 месяца назад +1

      I think our society is pretty accepting and supportive compared to being manacled, shackled and chained to the wall while being doused in freezing water on a regular basis ... which were the treatments in the mid 19th century.

  • @smile75058
    @smile75058 Год назад +24

    It’s interesting to see my experience from an outsiders perspective. I didn’t realize this is how non autistic folks see some of the things I do. My hope is that in the future we move from a deficit disorder model with ASD to a more inclusive and from the perspective of someone experiencing Autism.
    Research is indicating these days that folks with ASD don’t suffer social deficits when interacting with other autistics AND that we actually do have social communication skills they’re just different
    Also sometimes repetitive behavioral interruption it isn’t about being preventive to engage in the behavior but more panic at the unexpected change. When you spend the majority of your existence as an outsider and experiencing senses at a heightened state with lots of seemingly random occurrences in a day … our repetitive behaviors are often soothing, bring comfort, or bring a sense of understanding it depends on the behavior and the why… most of us will be able to provide the why… in the case of flapping hands or hair chewing or repetitive sounds it’s often self soothing related to a panic attack (or “meltdown”). Lining up of toys or painting the same thing over and over could be for mastery, enjoying the order and patterns, interest, etc… you can ask us. I have an IQ of 156 … a lot of us are highly intelligent and capable of sharing our experience and why we do what we do.

    • @smile75058
      @smile75058 Год назад +9

      Autism is a difference of neural development not a deficit by nature.. the only reason it’s viewed as a deficit is because the world was not built with us in mind… but studies show again and again, that when accommodations and sensory needs are met and there is some “translation” autistics can function just as anyone…

    • @DhhskkHehdis
      @DhhskkHehdis 10 месяцев назад

      There is a Dr that you can get in touch with Dr Oyalo on RUclips. Am excited to share about how his herbs works perfectly in reversing my son autism. now his speech has improved

    • @AliceGibbs-x8j
      @AliceGibbs-x8j 8 месяцев назад

      I saw his recommendation and approach Dr Oyalo for Your herbs on RUclips. The herbs has so far work positive on my child’s eye contacts and speech improvement.

    • @fie4426
      @fie4426 3 месяца назад

      I make strange repetitive sounds, im glad nobody can hear me when i do that

  • @broham89
    @broham89 2 года назад +27

    Probably the best educational videos out on psychiatry and neurology

  • @aminrashid2469
    @aminrashid2469 Год назад +9

    Being a mental health professional i would say one thing clearly don't take these disorders for granted and keep close eye on the growing children and if you found something describe in this video please come forward and help and show the right path to their parents/ caregivers in terms of taking help of the expert in this domain and from where to take

    • @AliceGibbs-x8j
      @AliceGibbs-x8j 8 месяцев назад

      I saw his recommendation and approach Dr Oyalo for Your herbs on RUclips. The herbs has so far work positive on my child’s eye contacts and speech improvement.

  • @mariebryche7832
    @mariebryche7832 Год назад +6

    If I pass my finals it’s gonna be on you and your videos

  • @chettalibhatt228
    @chettalibhatt228 Год назад +3

    This is goldmine for psychiatry

  • @33rbriiae
    @33rbriiae 2 года назад +6

    I just stumbled about the schizophrenia and wondered if they have an autism Video (as i have the disorder) and wow, that was probably the best explaination Video, thanks :)

    • @AliceGibbs-x8j
      @AliceGibbs-x8j 8 месяцев назад

      I saw his recommendation and approach Dr Oyalo for Your herbs on RUclips. The herbs has so far work positive on my child’s eye contacts and speech improvement.

  • @fie4426
    @fie4426 3 месяца назад +1

    I had a friend with autism (he's alive but avoids me) who has savant syndrome. He can remember random numbers and most movie's dialogues. He also has insane spacial awareness

  • @fie4426
    @fie4426 3 месяца назад +1

    I wasnt able to communicate to the bare minimum extend until like age 20. People assumed i was arrogant and purposefully contraproductive. So i just avoided them until like age 25, after which i became somewhat normal-ish and able to communicate informally

  • @edraith
    @edraith 2 месяца назад +1

    It should also be noted that most autistic people suffer from some degree of cPTSD symptoms and this is especially true for the so called "high functioning" and even for the "subclinical" cases. Understanding autism, even in subclinical cases, and the insanely high relevance of cPTSD symptoms in autistic people should be the main focus of neuropsychology during the next decades.

    • @edraith
      @edraith 2 месяца назад +1

      Also important thing to remember: a lot of autistic people have a high degree of ADHD symptoms or straight-out adhd co-morbidity. When the person has a higher than average cognitive and intellective function those ADHD symptoms might help masking ADHD: at that point you get a person that seems incredibly intelligent, lazy, quirky and unwilling to act "normal" and not even therapists will suspect they're dealing with an autistic person until burnout hits, autistic and adhd traits start getting worse and the person will finally seek help from a neuropsychiatrist.
      There's a strong link between ADHD and Autism and while a comorbidity in an intellectually gifted person will make it extremely unlikely that the ADHD and Autism part will get assessed during childhood the cPTSD part will inevitably develop due to decades of mistreatment, bullying (by parents, relatives, teachers, schoolmates, people in streets...) and various degrees of abuse (psychological, physical, sexual, medical).
      So the part in this video about considering not to diagnose mild cases of autism should imho be reconsidered: don't diagnose mild autism, don't accommodate for it and what you get is cPTSD, depression, anxiety, suicide. "But the person seemed to be so smart, they didn't look autistic at all" yes and they were struggling WAY MORE than any Level 3 ASD with a cognitive disability.

  • @epicohuman2047
    @epicohuman2047 2 года назад +8

    Great lecture as usual. Please do more. Thank you so much

  • @Vegcrafttt
    @Vegcrafttt 9 месяцев назад +2

    We have begun to prefer disability over disorder. It is more accurate and it is classified as a disability

  • @soda_socrates
    @soda_socrates 6 месяцев назад

    Please make a video on specific learning disabilities as well. Thank you!

  • @fopdoodler9427
    @fopdoodler9427 9 месяцев назад +1

    I have always been able to deal with change better than average, but I am still diagnosed with autism.

  • @drpepper-c7p
    @drpepper-c7p Год назад +1

    I learned to speak later in life relative to toddlers and I suffered from infantile seizures. However nowadays, I have a richer vocabulary and stronger grasp on (not just the) english language compared to those who have it as their mother tongue. I am working towards neuroscience because of my special interest in it and I am aware its a bit ironic.

    • @AliceGibbs-x8j
      @AliceGibbs-x8j 8 месяцев назад

      I saw his recommendation and approach Dr Oyalo for Your herbs on RUclips. The herbs has so far work positive on my child’s eye contacts and speech improvement.

  • @TOAOM123
    @TOAOM123 Год назад +2

    Using a more broad diagnosis and wrapping the disorders into one package is the least autistic thing to do

  • @richardwilliams9181
    @richardwilliams9181 2 года назад +2

    So, I see a few characteristics that are similar between Autism and ASPD. How can you definitively distinguish the 2? Or is it possible that someone could have both disorders simultaneously?

    • @sheawhite9451
      @sheawhite9451 Год назад +7

      While it's possible for someone to have both conditions there are key differences. People on the autism spectrum lack in interpersonal relationships because they are unaware of social cues, as in they don't do off-putting things intentionally and actually seek meaningful relationships with other people. On the other hand, individuals with aspd understand social interaction and offend people intentionally due to lack of empathy. There is also a much higher rate of criminality in people with aspd.

    • @AliceGibbs-x8j
      @AliceGibbs-x8j 8 месяцев назад

      I saw his recommendation and approach Dr Oyalo for Your herbs on RUclips. The herbs has so far work positive on my child’s eye contacts and speech improvement.

  • @igorbegpines6179
    @igorbegpines6179 Год назад

    Thanks for this great video, brother🙏

  • @elioperez2354
    @elioperez2354 2 года назад +2

    Thank you for these amazing videos.

  • @samlj2135
    @samlj2135 Год назад

    Thank you great knowledge explained

  • @shadiattari9528
    @shadiattari9528 2 года назад +2

    These videos are sooo helpfulll❤❤❤thank you for your content

  • @kulatyctverec8312
    @kulatyctverec8312 Год назад

    Damn your channel is really underrated in subs. Thank you so much for this video. Ill have neurology exam in one week and one of many questions is neurodevelopmental disordes and autism is part of it and this was really helpfull! Thank you so much. Its always better to see examples of the symptoms other than just learn them in general and this is what your video have. Wish you best.

    • @DhhskkHehdis
      @DhhskkHehdis 10 месяцев назад

      There is a Dr that you can get in touch with Dr Oyalo on RUclips. Am excited to share about how his herbs works perfectly in reversing my son autism. now his speech has improved

    • @AliceGibbs-x8j
      @AliceGibbs-x8j 8 месяцев назад

      I saw his recommendation and approach Dr Oyalo for Your herbs on RUclips. The herbs has so far work positive on my child’s eye contacts and speech improvement.

  • @pacifiquebusiness
    @pacifiquebusiness 9 месяцев назад

    Thank You 🙏🩺

  • @AliceGibbs-x8j
    @AliceGibbs-x8j 8 месяцев назад +1

    Your herbs has work wonders in my family.
    Thanks for the help Dr Oyalo for saving my son from autism spectrum with your herbs. Your herbs is the best.

  • @prawinbk8599
    @prawinbk8599 2 года назад

    Very informative.... thank you for your effort.

  • @domitillamezzanotte1598
    @domitillamezzanotte1598 7 месяцев назад +1

    the last part is very wrong. One thing first: is not a disorder but a disability. Second behavioral therapy reinforce masking which is one of the most common coping mechanism (and mirroring) the causes distress meltdowns and shutdowns overall going to aggravate one's mental state. Many autistic people can go non verbal at any time and we should make it okay to use non verbal communication. Also the traits dont go away while aging is just that people learn how to interact with neurotypicals but the stress, anxiety and all that stays the same. Is like living constantly with a mask on and acting to be perceived as normal by others it fucking sucks and it doesnt get easier.

    • @Gemmasmith140981
      @Gemmasmith140981 4 месяца назад

      Masking is not going to help your mental health, be yourself and be around good people who don't expect you to conform to their perception of normal, if you meet new people and tell them you are autistic then I am sure most people would understand and therefore not judge or view you in the wrong way if you did or said something a bit different to the norm

    • @domitillamezzanotte1598
      @domitillamezzanotte1598 4 месяца назад

      @@Gemmasmith140981 where did i write that masking is helpful???

    • @Gemmasmith140981
      @Gemmasmith140981 4 месяца назад

      @@domitillamezzanotte1598 I meant that I agree that masking is not good for anyone's mental health and general wellbeing

    • @domitillamezzanotte1598
      @domitillamezzanotte1598 4 месяца назад

      @@Gemmasmith140981 oh okay!!! I was worried that my comment could have been seen has masking is good 😭 and about this, my roommate recently said that she doesn't believe in autism/adhd and that I use it as a please as excuse 😀 and it is probably because I mask so well (and then I suffer in my room) 🤓 I live in a university dormitory and did not choose her lmao (nor can I change room but im almost done, so) :(

    • @Gemmasmith140981
      @Gemmasmith140981 4 месяца назад

      @@domitillamezzanotte1598 yeah you must mask really well, suffer for it and then to add insult to injury someone says something ridiculous like that. My son has level 3 autism, he is only 5 but he is in his own happy little world, he could not mask if he wanted to because he doesn't have much interest in people at all, he loves opening and closing doors all day. I often think that in many ways it would be more difficult to cope with autism on the lower end because of the stress of never being able to be yourself and think about everything you say and do incase the people around you perceive it the wrong way or it is not deemed socially acceptable for some reason. I think as long as my son is fortunate enough to be around genuine caring people through out his life he will be happy as he doesn't understand social expectations and rules, he is quite oblivious to most of the world around him and all the people in it

  • @paddingtontogara5426
    @paddingtontogara5426 2 года назад

    thanks a lot

  • @mokilbandong6472
    @mokilbandong6472 2 года назад

    Brilliant!

  • @febetoortelboom5962
    @febetoortelboom5962 2 года назад +4

    I think I might have a mild form of autism.

  • @latifahajet8907
    @latifahajet8907 Год назад

    My nephew can make sounds but can form words or make a sentence, he is 3 year old. He also restless, always screaming, banging head on the wall, destroying stuffs. How can he get help.

    • @___Anakin.Skywalker
      @___Anakin.Skywalker Год назад +2

      My son has autism... I brought him to an occupational therapist. It was explained to us by the doctor that if he doesn't get therapy he'd be stunted for life. An autistic child needs to get therapy as well as possible, once a child turn 5 or 6 it would be extremely hard to get them to improve.

  • @Star-dj1kw
    @Star-dj1kw Год назад

    ❤Great video

  • @rebeccadubarry8523
    @rebeccadubarry8523 3 месяца назад

    Thank you for your hard work but your voice is lacking. ❤

  • @hodgenick
    @hodgenick 8 месяцев назад +2

    This description comes from a perspective of neurodivergent people are lesser people. It's a highly bigoted and borderline abusive.

  • @dimitravas6920
    @dimitravas6920 9 месяцев назад

  • @AliAzizQualityEducation
    @AliAzizQualityEducation 5 месяцев назад

    Autism Spectrum Disorders | Top Early Signs : ruclips.net/video/rr5ln2JokbY/видео.html

  • @MaryJones-d7e
    @MaryJones-d7e Месяц назад

    Jackson Laura Brown John Miller Brian

  • @malcolmexistential306
    @malcolmexistential306 2 месяца назад

    A

  • @WickedAutsome
    @WickedAutsome 2 месяца назад

    We now say Autism Spectrum and not DISORDER. Not deficit, difference.

  • @jerryanstey7058
    @jerryanstey7058 2 года назад

    This has about as much truth in it as religion !!!

    • @fauzanree1983
      @fauzanree1983 Год назад +2

      Imagine proving your idiocy on two levels on your own 💀