L5 - Mental Health in Typical and Atypical Development Flashcards
What is mental health in autism?
First described in 1940 by Kanner
- fear and anxiety
- depression
- insistence on sameness
- intolerance to uncertainty
Recently been explored among other conditions to improve diagnosis
What is the prevalence of mental health?
23% of the UK population experience a mental health problem - depression is the most common
79% autistic adults meet criteria for a psychiatric condition - depression being the most common
Depression/anxiety presents 30-50% of autistic adults and 30% of children
What are the risks/protective factors?
Environment - stress, bereavement, finance, bullying, unemployment
Societal - attitude, stigma, poverty
Biological - genetic, brain structure and function
Psychological - thinking style, coping strategies
How does difficult life experiences link to autism?
Autistic adults are significantly more likely to report difficult life experiences than non-autistic adults
- exclusion from education
- unemployment
- poverty
- abuse and exploitation
What difficulties can autistic people have with their thinking styles?
Difficulty thinking of alternatives
Difficulty to problem solve
Difficulty to switch from one train of thought to another
- protective factors - finding solutions/way out of difficult mood/circumstances
What social difficulties do autistic people face?
Difficulty interacting with non-autistic people
Increasing risk of: loneliness, lack of social support, exclusion from social spaces, lack of acceptance, feeling rejected, low self esteem
What are social challenges for autistic people?
Have difficulty interacting with neurotypical majority (Milton, 2012)
Perceived negatively by non-autistic people (Sasson, 2017)
Less readable by non-autistic people which may lead to being perceived negatively (Alkhaldi, 2019)
Double empathy problem
What is camouflaging?
What autistic people do to cape/fit in to social situations
- contribute to misdiagnosis
- takes toll on mental health
- loss of identity
- exhausting
- lack of acceptance
Compensation - compensate for social difficulties
Masking - present a less autistic persona
Assimilation - fit into uncomfortable situations
How does camouflaging link to mental health?
305 autistic adults (18-75 years):
Increased camouflaging scores predicted increased depression and anxiety
Association strongest for anxiety
Associations equally strong across genders
High autistic traits associated with camouflaging, thwarted belonging and suicidality
Is there a link between camouflaging and suicidality?
164 autistic and 169 non-autistic adults:
Predictors of lifetime suicidality - autism diagnosis (4.5%) - autistic traits (3.2%)
Autistic adults - camouflaging (3.5%), unmet support needs (3.1%), non-suicidal self-injury (4%)
What are the findings of camouflaging and mental health?
Inconsistent:
Camouflaging doesn’t equal depression (Cage 2019)
Camouflaging does equal depress in men (Lai 2017)
Camouflaging doesn’t equal anxiety
Possibly due to small sample size
What is the critical appraisal of research?
Autistic adults without co-occurring intellectual disability
Large portion of females
Most diagnosed autistic were male
Large proportion late diagnosis
Self-report measures
Opportunity samples, self-selecting
Camouflaging is not well defined
Gender differences?
What are social and non-social difficulties?
Non-social - difficulties thinking of alternatives, problem solving difficulties, increase risk of mental health problems
Social - difficulties in imagination and repetitive behaviours –> suicidality, suggest feeling sad, stuck and difficulty in imagining alternative strategies increases risk of suicidal thoughts
How does social problem solving link to depression?
Self-reported autistic traits associated with current self reported depression, significantly mediated by difficulties in social problem solving skills
Young adulthood + ASD social struggles –> social consequences –> emotional consequences
How does autism include description of mental health?
Early description of autism include mental health difficulties - depression and anxiety
- is mental health part of autism
- are they expressed differently in autism
This can lead to difficulties in assessing mental health in autistic people