Self-diagnosis: Difference between revisions

From ActuallyAutistic Wiki
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 2: Line 2:


Barriers to receiving a formal diagnosis include: sexism against women having Autism, racism, poverty and lack of access to healthcare, lack of access to queer accepting healthcare, and many doctors refuse to diagnose adults who were not diagnosed in childhood.  
Barriers to receiving a formal diagnosis include: sexism against women having Autism, racism, poverty and lack of access to healthcare, lack of access to queer accepting healthcare, and many doctors refuse to diagnose adults who were not diagnosed in childhood.  
Some may also avoid receiving a formal diagnosis due to the stigma received from having an autism diagnosis on their medical record. In particular, autism diagnoses have been used to deny child custody, access to medical care, entrance to some countries, and general autonomy.


(This is a stub)
(This is a stub)

Revision as of 05:06, 23 August 2022

Self diagnosis (Self-dx) is generally accepted in the Autistic community because it is often both hard and expensive to get a formal diagnosis. In some cases, the individual may think it isn't even worth pursuing. Many people self-dx after doing lots of research both online in Autistic Communities and lots of self-reflection, something Autistics can tend to do a lot of.

Barriers to receiving a formal diagnosis include: sexism against women having Autism, racism, poverty and lack of access to healthcare, lack of access to queer accepting healthcare, and many doctors refuse to diagnose adults who were not diagnosed in childhood.

Some may also avoid receiving a formal diagnosis due to the stigma received from having an autism diagnosis on their medical record. In particular, autism diagnoses have been used to deny child custody, access to medical care, entrance to some countries, and general autonomy.

(This is a stub)