Susan's Place Logo

News:

Based on internal web log processing I show 3,417,511 Users made 5,324,115 Visits Accounting for 199,729,420 pageviews and 8.954.49 TB of data transfer for 2017, all on a little over $2,000 per month.

Help support this website by Donating or Subscribing! (Updated)

Main Menu

Article on transgender and Asperger's

Started by aleon515, February 03, 2013, 12:48:11 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

aleon515

It doesn't come to any conclusions and is VERY short but interesting:
http://transtherapy.wordpress.com/tag/aspergers/

--Jay
  •  

Angela???

The sad reality is it's not just transgender people that get missed diagnoised.  :(  normal people (which I don't fit in!) get missed diagnoised as well, but the worst I have seen with my own eyes is all the disabled people! I personaly help one disabled lady get off a speed based drug she had been taking for 13 years, She never needed it, she was not ADHD! She was Bi-pola, stupid some doctors are!!!!!!
I'm a girl, I always knew!
Now it's time to stop hidding and show the world who I really am!
  •  

spacial

I am qualified as a psychiatric nurse and spent a number of years. Sorry to say but misdiagnosis is incredibly common. But almost impossible to prevent.

The first problem is the information received. If you assume that a diagnosis comes from actually meeting a patient, then, with repsect, that's wrong. Diagnosis comes from putting together all the available information. Sadly, so many patients and their immediate relatives lie or exagerate.

Information received can come from anywhere. It may have been through a number of different agencies already, each puttin their own gloss. It is incredibly common to have reports of extreme violence and sexual misconduct, especially from young men.

When I was 16, I spent a couple of years under the supervision of welfare authorities. I had a terrible time to be frank.

When I reached 30 I started to discover some of the reasons. I had been labeled with a number of very serious offenses. All apparently happening before I reached 15. That some were impossible, others highly unlikely and others contradictory, was not taken into consideration. The records said such. They can only go on the records.

I'm in my mid 50s. Even now I can't risk repeating most of those. It's not help that I can provide concrete evidence that some at least didn't happen at all while others were so unlikely. People have been lynched for less. Literally.

Another problem I had was that I was transgender at a time when homosexuaity was still a crime (though never prosecuted) and homos were seen as perverted bottom obscessed, danger to dogs, women and children.

To make matters worse, there was a presumption of normal sexual development. Young people would grow up, seek out a partner of the opposit sex, get married and have children. Any deivation from that was assumed to be a result of sexual abuse by their father. (Since women aren't intersted in sex so they didn't do it). Such deviation could include teenage girls being promiscuous.

The numbers presenting because fo drug abuse for example is, in some areas, as high as 90% of all referrals. Drug abusers have several things in common, they are all dishonest and without exception what they really want is their drug. (Speaking as a fromer smoker, 2 years later, I will kill for a smoke).

The influence of the mental health act, (in the UK) gives these people a feeling of autonomy, being above the law, which in reality they are. There are similar arrangements in every country, including all of the US. I can't produce figures of information for abuse, other than to say it is avoided at all costs. But I can say, without doubt, that giving people that amount of power corrupts absolutely.

But are you seriously willing to remove it from them? (Think of Dr Keith Ablow).

Then there is the reality that many conditons are simply untreatable. Though the world is full of charlitans who claim they can. Therapists, Scientologists, to name two.

I'm sorry but however intersting these reports are and however serious their implications, the reality is, mistakes in psychiatry are inevitable. There is so much that could be done but I fear that medics and psychiatrists esepecially, are not the ones to do it.

None of this is intended to attack or criticise anyone, especially here in Susans'. If I am blunt it's just my own inadequacies.
  •  

suzifrommd

The dirty truth that no Psych professional wants to acknowledge is that transgender is largely a self diagnosed condition.

No one goes into their doctor and says "gee doc, don't know what's wrong with me" doc listens, then says "Ah. You're transgender. The feathered boa over your 3-piece suit gave you away."

At best, after we've struggled for awhile with what our brains are telling us, we can have a professional tell us, yes, that sounds like transgender. (Or, if we're unlucky like me, go to the wrong guy and have him tell us how we're being irresponsible and haven't thought through our plans to transition).

So if our transgender manifests itself in an atypical way, or we've bought sufficiently into the myths propagated by the media about transgender that we don't recognize it in ourselves, it's really unlikely that even the best therapist, the most versed in transgender, is going to recognize it for us.
Have you read my short story The Eve of Triumph?
  •  

FTMDiaries

When I was diagnosed with Asperger's, I told the psychologist that I have always had difficulties with being treated like a 'woman' but she didn't pick up on them. She even signed me up for a six-week support group, specifically because she wanted a 'woman' in the group to balance out all the men who'd just been diagnosed. So I was sent along as a representative of the female perspective - something that's always been a complete mystery to me. Ugh. It was very uncomfortable, but I made some friends and the group was generally helpful otherwise.

I liked what the blogpost author was saying about giving gender-nonconforming children the space to explore themselves. This is what I've always done with my own children. One of them is a very girly girl and we've encouraged her in that; the other is both autistic and gender-nonconforming so we've never pushed her to do girly things. We've always let her tell us what she's interested in and we've supported her in that. Is she trans? Who knows? But either way, at least we haven't forced her to be something she isn't. 





  •  

spacial

I found this in the NYT and accidentally posted in another thread, started by another member who is having problems with the NHS. Really sorry it was intended for here.

I found this in the NYT. It's interesting if only to demonstrate what Drs and other psychiatric professionals are up against.

QuoteDrowned in a Stream of Prescriptions

...............................................

It was there that her son, Richard, visited a doctor and received prescriptions for Adderall, an amphetamine-based medication for attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. It was in the parking lot that she insisted to Richard that he did not have A.D.H.D., not as a child and not now as a 24-year-old college graduate, and that he was getting dangerously addicted to the medication. It was inside the building that her husband, Rick, implored Richard's doctor to stop prescribing him Adderall, warning, "You're going to kill him."

It was where, after becoming violently delusional and spending a week in a psychiatric hospital in 2011, Richard met with his doctor and received prescriptions for 90 more days of Adderall. He hanged himself in his bedroom closet two weeks after they expired. ....................

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/03/us/concerns-about-adhd-practices-and-amphetamine-addiction.html?nl=todaysheadlines&emc=edit_th_20130203&_r=0
  •