So dd had her six month neurodevelopmental pedi checkup today. It went pretty well. She definitely shared my concerns of autism especially with the new info about her knowing her letters/starting to read. She was pretty unresponsive to her name (which I stated had gotten better, haha), wouldn't follow a point, and the doctor had a really difficult time engaging her. When she sat down to play with her, things got better. She eventually spoke to the pedi--said no when she didn't want to do something, said done when she wanted to move on, and asked for help. She made good eye contact when using words to communicate which she said was a good sign and demonstrated some joint attention as well. After the Eval when i was speaking to the doctor about her thoughts, dd started intentionally being naughty to get my attention and giggling which her dr said was not consistent with autism. She said there was enough she saw to recommend doing the ADOS to know for sure, but felt that even if she was on spectrum that the prognosis was excellent considering both the hyperlexia and how well she communicated. Overall she said she was a fascinating case but she was completely stumped by her.
That leads me to my question. How long does the ADOS take? What will be expected of her?
Re: Update/talk to me about the ADOS.
DS 09/2008
She told me that she said hyperlexia is a positive thing because those kids seem to have the best outcomes. I guess there's ways the reading skills can help treat the social deficits (though I'm not sure how) and language (she picks up words at a much faster rate if the word is shown to her and the skill is generalizing to using the word functionally). She also said kids with hyperlexia can lose the diagnosis with age and since she has gained verbal communication skills as her language progressed she felt that was telling.
That makes sense, but from what she told me that Katie Beckett would provide us a lot more services with a dx than without though I get that varies from state to state. I could read between the lines that theyre very generous with diagnosing to get kids more help. Naturally as a parent I'm going to take whatever they offer to help my kid.
From what they told me, high functioning kids are really tough to diagnose this young and its tough to tease out autism from adhd. if a kid has a decent amount of traits they do diagnose to help get services then reassess in a few years when age has hopefully brought more clarity to either confirm or diagnose with something else like ADHD.