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So earlier today (actually 6am, but who's keeping track) I was watching educational TV and one of the series of shows I watched was on psychology....one of those video series they show in college classes. I'm a nerd...I like this stuff.
Anyhoo..
The videos were on different psychological diagnoses, their history, their signs/symptoms, and treatments.
One of the videos was about mental disorders, and how our definition and treatment of them have changed throughout the ages. These videos are from the early 90's, so there was brief talk about autism, mental retardation, schizophrenia, etc.
The point was made that for the majority of human history, people who were "different" were locked away in asylums or prisons early in life and it wasn't until relatively recently in our history that we began to study these folks and understand their wiring, how to treat them (hint: not asylums!), etc.
And that got me thinking.....which is always a dangerous thing....about autism rates, and how reliable our "rates have increased since X years" train of thought is, and how quick we (as people) can be to posthumously diagnose people with certain medical diagnoses that they may or may not have had.
How accurate are the rates of percentage of a given population having X disorder if that disorder wasn't even a medical term until, say, 1950 (just pulling a year out of thin air). For viral and disease issues, I can see where this may be somewhat valid, but still not definitively valid since we didn't have the diagnostic tests to differentiate, say, AIDS, from other cancers.
But with mental illness, how can we say that X illness started increasing in rates when we don't even have a way to know how many people suffered from X illness prior to it being a true medical diagnosis?
If you look back in history, there are millions of people who were locked away for being "different". Different could mean bipolar, or schizophrenic, or mentally retarded, or austistic, or whatever. But unless we have complete records....back to the 1200's or 1500's...of all of those that were locked away, exiled, or killed for being "different", we have no way of knowing how prevalent these illnesses were in those times.
Could it be that throughout human history, the prevalence of autism, or schizophrenia, or mental retardation HAVE been static, we just didn't know how to recognize these issues as true medical diagnoses until relatively recently?
Am I making sense?
Kind of like cancer---throughout literature there are accounts of people who were taken by these terrible illnesses that were never called "cancer", but looking back through our more advanced method of diagnosis, we can conjure with relative certainty that some people DID die from breast cancer, or uterine cancer, or lung cancer. We can make that diagnosis now when we weren't able to make it then (thank you scientific method!!)
I guess what I'm saying is that it's hard for me to take at face value the idea that X medical diagnosis has just EXPLODED in the last 30 years when prior to 30 years, it wasn't a diagnosable disorder, or it was thought as of something else....
---- Oh, and another thing that really annoys me (hence the subject title) is the posthumous diagnosis of everyone who ever did anything moderately great. "OH, Einstein was DEFINITELY Aspergers! Totally!" and "Thomas Jefferson is a CLASSIC case of Indigo. TOTALLY!!"
I understand the need to validate our own...struggles? I don't know if that's the right word...I'm not trying to demoralize or downplay any kind of mental health issue that someone is struggling with. I know it makes me feel....more connected...when I find out that someone famous, or popular, or intelligent went through a thing that is similar to something I went through.
But I don't like the idea of cherry picking people who very little may have been written about to begin with, being labeled with all of these terms and diagnoses that they may or may not have had. Just because someone was smart doesn't mean they fit somewhere on the ASD. IT doesn't mean that they didn't, either.
In any event, I have seen lists where very non-medical minded individuals list all of the "dead" people in our history, that happened to be very intelligent, as having fitting somewhere on the autism spectrum. I mean EVERY SINGLE HUMAN that contributed something worthwhile to societal or scientific advance, everyone who was ever mentioned in our history books, has autism.
Homer Michaellangelo Raphael Jesus Sir Isaac Newton Einstein Cleopatra Shakespeare Ramses III George Washington Abraham Lincoln Thomas Jefferson Teddy Roosevelt The Other Roosevelt (:D) Aesop
I think you get my drift. Only these lists are pages and pages long.
And it makes me think, linking to my point above, that doesn't THIS prove that Autism rates probably haven't skyrocketed like we've been told they have? That the numbers are pretty static, especially if EVERY SINGLE PERSON that is in our history books is given a Dx of Autism?
and why only the "famous" people we know? Why not "Jimmy the water fetching boy" or "Mathildae, the bar wench"?
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