The DIR Model (Developmental, Individual Difference, Relationship Based): A Parent Mediated Mental Health Approach to Autism Spectrum Disorders

Author(s):  
Serena Wieder
2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 33-43
Author(s):  
Nicolas Garel ◽  
Patricia Garel

Background: Despite increased attention and recognition of autism spectrum disorders, many patients suffering from these disorders remain undiagnosed or are diagnosed late due to their subtle clinical presentation. The challenge for clinicians working in the field of mental health is not in screening and diagnosing young children showing typical signs of autism spectrum disorders, but rather in identifying patients at the high-functioning end of the spectrum whose intellectual abilities mask their social deficits. Objective: Because therapeutic interventions differ radically once the diagnosis of ASD has been made, it is important to understand the trajectory of those adolescents and identify clues that could help raise the diagnosis of ASD earlier. Methods: Records of eight adolescents with a late diagnosis of ASD were retrospectively reviewed to identify relevant clinical features that were overlooked in childhood and early adolescence. Results: The patients were previously misdiagnosed with multiple mental health disorders. These cases showed striking similarities in terms of developmental history, reasons for misdiagnosis, and the clinical picture at the time of ASD recognition. The cases were characterized by complex and fluctuating symptomatology, including depression, anxiety, behavioural problems, self-injurious behaviour and suicidal thoughts. Their Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) went previously undiagnosed due to the individual’s intelligence and learning abilities, which masked their social deficits and developmental irregularities. Signs of ASD were continuously present since childhood in all the eight cases. Once the developmental histories and the psychiatric evaluation of these adolescents were done by psychiatrists with appropriate knowledge of autism, the diagnosis of ASD was made. Conclusion: The ASD hypothesis should be raised in the presence of confusing symptoms that do not respond to usual treatment and are accompanied by an irregular developmental background. It is indeed a difficult diagnosis to make; however, the focused clinician can note subtle signs of ASD despite the intellectual learning of social codes. Family history, developmental irregularities, rigidity, difficulty in spontaneously understanding emotions, discomfort in groups and the need to be alone are significant indicators to recognize. Once the diagnosis has been considered, it must be confirmed or rejected by an experienced multidisciplinary team. The challenge for clinicians working in the field of mental health is not in screening and diagnosing young children showing typical signs of ASD, but rather in identifying patients who are at high-functioning end of the spectrum whose intellectual abilities mask their social deficits.


Author(s):  
Valeriia Dats ◽  
Vadim Chuhunov

Aim of the study was to form target system of clinical correction, based on the analysis of pathogenesis factors of odontophobic reactions in children with autism.Materials and methods: 30 children with various dental diseases which had a concomitant diagnosis of autism spectrum disorders and showed odontophobic reactions were examined. The detection of odontophobic reactions was performed using the ethological method.The results of the search for targets for psychocorrection interventions at each level of presentation of each pathological phenomenon, which determine the development of odontophobic reactions in children with different levels of mental health, allow us to formulate a targeted model of adaptation to the conditions of dental admission.Conclusions: psychocorrection interventions aimed at leveling odontophobic reactions of stenic-negativistic, insulating and transaffective type in children with autism are formulated by modifying the basic phenomena of their pathogenesis (fencing, stereotypes, and anancasms).


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