Physicians use criteria from the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders to diagnose autism, while school officials use criteria from the Missouri Department of Elementary and Secondary Education. Here's a look at how the two sets of criteria compare.
DSM criteriaA child must exhibit at least six of the following symptoms:
Marked impairment in the use of eye contact, facial expression, body posture, gestures
Failure to develop peer relationships
Doesn't seek to share enjoyment, interests or achievements with other people
A lack of social or emotional reciprocity
A delay in or total lack of spoken language
Impairment in ability to initiate or sustain a conversation
Repetitive use of language
Lack of make-believe play or social imitation play
Preoccupied with one or more restricted pattern of interest that is abnormally intense or focused
Inflexible to routines or rituals
Repetitive motor mannerism, such as hand flapping or twisting
Preoccupied with parts of objects
A child must exhibit delays in at least one of these areas prior to age 3:
Social interaction
Language
Symbolic or imaginative play
School district criteria
A child must exhibit disturbance in one or more of these areas:
Abnormalities that extend beyond speech to many aspects of communication
Absence of communicative language
Characteristics involving both deviance and delay
Deficits in the capacity to use language for social communication
A child must exhibit disturbance in one or more of these areas:
Abnormalities relating to people, events or objects
Capacity to form relationships with people
Absent or delayed use of objects in age-appropriate way
Rigid about routines
Source: The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual for Mental Retardation and the Missouri Department of Elementary and Secondary Education
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