Roadblocks and detours on pathways to a clinical diagnosis of autism for girls and women: A qualitative secondary analysis

Author:

Hamdani Yani12ORCID,Kassee Caroline1,Walker Meaghan12,Lunsky Yona13,Gladstone Brenda4,Sawyer Amanda13,Ameis Stephanie H13,Desarkar Pushpal13,Szatmari Peter135,Lai Meng-Chuan135

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, Toronto, ON, Canada

2. Department of Occupational Science and Occupational Therapy, Temerty Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada

3. Department of Psychiatry, Temerty Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada

4. Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada

5. Department of Psychiatry, The Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, ON, Canada

Abstract

Background: Autism is not always considered for girls and women until later along their clinical diagnostic pathways. Misdiagnosis or late diagnosis can pose significant disadvantages with respect to accessing timely health and autism-related services and supports. Understanding what contributes to roadblocks and detours along clinical pathways to an autism diagnosis can shed light on missed opportunities for earlier recognition. Objective: Our objective was to examine what contributed to roadblocks, detours, and missed opportunities for earlier recognition and clinical diagnosis of autism for girls and women. Design: We conducted a qualitative secondary analysis using data from a Canadian primary study that examined the health and healthcare experiences of autistic girls and women through interviews and focus groups. Methods: Transcript data of 22 girls and women clinically diagnosed with autism and 15 parents were analysed, drawing on reflexive thematic analysis procedures. Techniques included coding data both inductively based on descriptions of roadblocks and detours and deductively based on conceptualizations of sex and gender. Patterns of ideas were categorized into themes and the ‘story’ of each theme was refined through writing and discussing analytic memos, reflecting on sex and gender assumptions, and creating a visual map of clinical pathways. Results: Contributing factors to roadblocks, detours, and missed opportunities for earlier recognition and diagnosis were categorized as follows: (1) age of pre-diagnosis ‘red flags’ and ‘signals’; (2) ‘non-autism’ mental health diagnoses first; (3) narrow understandings of autism based on male stereotypes; and (4) unavailable and unaffordable diagnostic services. Conclusion: Professionals providing developmental, mental health, educational, and/or employment supports can be more attuned to nuanced autism presentations. Research in collaboration with autistic girls and women and their childhood caregivers can help to identify examples of nuanced autistic features and how context plays a role in how these are experienced and navigated.

Funder

Psychiatry Excellence Fund, University of Toronto

Women's Xchange 15K Challenge, Women's College Hospital

Academic Scholars Award

Department of Psychiatry, University of Toronto

Canadian Institutes of Health Research Sex and Gender Science Chair

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Medicine

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