NativeSon Wrote:Thanks.
Is there any prescribed treatment or therapy for autism? If there is, is it lifelong? How expensive is it? How successful is it?
There is therapy to teach one social skills and how to abide by the rules of their spectrum complications. There are no drug treatments. High functioning Autistic people are prevalent in all walks of society. Most have a higher "practical" intelligence, meaning things like maths, science, facts, and have a lower "social" intelligence, how to do small talk, knowing when to stop talking, reading the many subtle emotions aside from the strong ones.
Being a relatively "new" discovery and poorly researched, kids back in the 60's and 70's were treated for things like ADHD or "hyperactivity" - essentially we were dosed with amphetamines. This has lead to things like drug issues. For instance my drug of choice is methamphetamine - the same substance with one minor change.
This mis-diagnoses and medication has lead to a data flaw in research that autistic children will grow up with a greater chance of drug addiction. This is how little is understood about the disorder.
Yes its lifelong. Its a brain wiring thing, and until humans can figure out how to rewire neurons there is no "cure".
Success rate depends on where on the spectrum one is and how much one wants to appear "normal".
We here talk about straight acting - well for most high functioning autistic individuals that straight acting means blending in with "normal" or "neural-normal" people.
This is only something temporary. Autistic individuals need "me time" on a daily basis to release their inner Kracken, if they are forced to be "on" for too long it can actually lead to a hard regression even temporary lowering in the spectrum.
They still don't know what consequences Autism will have on people 50, 60, 70 + years of age. From what I have read there is two data sets. The happy data set suggests that only a few elderly HFA individuals have worsening symptoms.
The other not so happy data set points to a fair amount of regression and in cases where other health issues loom there is a steady drop into the spectrum, getting more autistic.
My personal experience has been the not so happy side. I no longer stop myself from rocking or displaying autistic body language in public. Either I'm lacking the ability to refrain, or I'm just old enough to say "oh fuck it".
My generation is the one that much research is being done on, but like I said, the data set is flawed due to how we were misdiagnosed, how we had our social skills learned, or as in my case, literally beaten into us.
So, it the younger generation that is being raised with "understanding" and closer monitoring of how data is being taken that will eventually lead to options for treatment.