Home » Tax Credit a Relief for People With ADHD and Autism
Tax Credit a Relief for People With ADHD and Autism
November 30, 2015 by dccinc
Autism and ADHD (Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder) have long been considered separate conditions because the former primarily affects the way children develop socially while the latter primarily affects the way children develop mentally.Recent studies, however, have cast a cloud of doubt over the thesis that the conditions are unrelated because they seem to show that as many as 30% of children with autism may also have ADHD; a far higher rate than would normally be expected.An article at huffingtonpost.com addresses the new findings and starts by laying out the differences between the two disorders beginning with autism:
Autism is a disorder of child development in which social skills do not develop as expected. More severe impairment involves children who may barely interact with others around them, and have quite limited language. On the other end of the spectrum are fairly extroverted children who seek out others and often relate well with adults, yet have a hard time understanding how to get along with children.Children with ADHD also manifest difficulties with many types of social interactions. They’re often extremely talkative, wander from topic to topic, and interrupt others when they’re speaking. But the differences between ADHD and autism in this regard are subtle, as the article demonstrates:
The best one-line description of ADHD may come from Dr. Russell Barkley who said, “ADHD is not a disorder of not knowing what to do, it is a disorder of not doing what you know.” This concept also helps separate ADHD from autism, as children with ADHD typically know the social rules, they just don’t know how to follow them yet.Yet as the new data indicates, even this type of clear, easy-to-understand explanation of ADHD and Autism disorders may soon have to be discarded as the degree and nature of the newly discovered overlap is probed and its mysteries revealed.Indeed this diagnostic overlap may signal a new direction is necessary in research aimed at getting to the bottom of both conditions (if indeed they are two separate conditions). It may also go some way toward explaining why some who’ve been diagnosed with one or the other condition never seem to respond to treatment in any substantive way. For such individuals, their only lifeline to a sense of normalcy is often the Disability Tax Credit.