Livingston Lucy Anne, Shah Punit, Happé Francesca
Social, Genetic, and Developmental Psychiatry Centre, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology, and Neuroscience, King's College London, London, UK.
Department of Psychology, University of Bath, Bath, UK.
Lancet Psychiatry. 2019 Sep;6(9):766-777. doi: 10.1016/S2215-0366(19)30224-X. Epub 2019 Jul 23.
Little is known about the compensatory profile in autism; that is, people with autism spectrum disorder who show few symptoms in their behavioural presentation, despite continuing to report autism-related cognitive difficulties or differences. Even less is known about the specific compensatory strategies that these individuals use to disguise autism at the behavioural surface, both in the clinic and everyday life. It is also currently unclear whether individuals without a formal autism diagnosis, but experiencing autistic-like difficulties, use similar compensatory strategies, potentially enabling them to sit below the diagnostic threshold. This study aimed to investigate social compensatory strategies, and their effect on diagnosis and clinical outcome, in adults with and without autism.
In this study, individuals aged 18 years or older who responded to a study advert that was distributed worldwide via social media and the UK National Autistic Society formed a convenience sample. Participants self-reported their use and experiences of compensatory strategies using an online platform. Novel analyses, including a qualitative thematic approach, were used to interpret their responses and gain insight into compensatory strategies in autism.
Between Oct 19, 2017, and Jan 2, 2018, 136 adults (58 had a clinical diagnosis of autism, 19 self-identified but were not formally diagnosed as autistic, and 59 were not diagnosed or self-identified, but nevertheless reported social difficulties) completed the online study questions. The findings suggested that there are multiple compensatory strategies with distinct characteristics, individual and environmental factors that modulate compensatory strategy use and success, positive (social relationships, independence, employment) and negative (poor mental health, late diagnosis) outcomes associated with compensatory strategy use, and that individuals without a diagnosis use compensatory strategies that are qualitatively similar to individuals with a diagnosis.
Increased awareness and measurement of compensatory strategy use in autism should guide future diagnostic guidelines, towards improved diagnostic accuracy and support for people with autism spectrum disorder whose cognitive difficulties are not immediately evident in observable behaviour.
UK Medical Research Council and UK National Institute for Health Research.
关于自闭症的代偿情况我们知之甚少;也就是说,患有自闭症谱系障碍的人在行为表现上症状较少,但仍持续报告与自闭症相关的认知困难或差异。对于这些人在临床和日常生活中用于在行为表面掩饰自闭症的具体代偿策略,我们了解得更少。目前也不清楚那些没有正式自闭症诊断但有类似自闭症困难的人是否使用类似的代偿策略,这可能使他们处于诊断阈值以下。本研究旨在调查有或没有自闭症的成年人的社交代偿策略及其对诊断和临床结果的影响。
在本研究中,通过社交媒体和英国国家自闭症协会在全球范围内发布研究广告,年龄在18岁及以上并回应广告的个体构成了一个便利样本。参与者通过在线平台自我报告他们使用代偿策略的情况和体验。采用包括定性主题方法在内的新颖分析方法来解释他们的回答,并深入了解自闭症中的代偿策略。
在2017年10月19日至2018年1月2日期间,136名成年人(58名有自闭症临床诊断,19名自我认定但未被正式诊断为自闭症,59名未被诊断或自我认定但报告有社交困难)完成了在线研究问题。研究结果表明,存在多种具有不同特征的代偿策略、调节代偿策略使用和成功的个体及环境因素、与代偿策略使用相关的积极(社会关系、独立性、就业)和消极(心理健康不佳、诊断延迟)结果,并且未被诊断的个体使用的代偿策略在质量上与被诊断的个体相似。
提高对自闭症中代偿策略使用的认识并进行测量,应指导未来的诊断指南,以提高诊断准确性,并为那些认知困难在可观察行为中不立即明显的自闭症谱系障碍患者提供支持。
英国医学研究理事会和英国国家卫生研究院。