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wanting to give son and wife help
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<blockquote data-quote="BusynMember" data-source="post: 199181" data-attributes="member: 1550"><p>We were also told my son was "too friendlY' to have any form of autism, but that was WRONG. I would wonder about some form of Pervasive Developmental Disorder (PDD) if she was a late talker, doesn't make eye contact and pottied late. Also being friendly to people she doesn't even know can be another symptom. Some hide, some just go up to anyone and think they are friends...that can be dangerous as they tend to be naive and will go off with anyone (we had to worry about that with my son until he got older). That non-stop, one way talking is annoying and also a symptom. I call it "monologuing." My sister works as an aide with autistic kids and it actually has an official name (the non-top, one way talking), but I forgot what she calls it. Those are big red flags. THose kids are very socially inappropriate and don't care how bad they look to others in public because they don't even know how bad they look in public. Here is an online Pervasive Developmental Disorder (PDD) assessmesnt test you can look at, but I would definitely see a neuropsychologist. They are good at spotting things that other diagnosticians miss simply because they take a very long time in their evaluation and look for everything. The prognosis, if caught young and given good interventions, is excellent. Read my post about my son going on a date! Never thought I'd see the day.</p><p></p><p><a href="http://www.childbrain.com/pddassess.html" target="_blank">http://www.childbrain.com/pddassess.html</a></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="BusynMember, post: 199181, member: 1550"] We were also told my son was "too friendlY' to have any form of autism, but that was WRONG. I would wonder about some form of Pervasive Developmental Disorder (PDD) if she was a late talker, doesn't make eye contact and pottied late. Also being friendly to people she doesn't even know can be another symptom. Some hide, some just go up to anyone and think they are friends...that can be dangerous as they tend to be naive and will go off with anyone (we had to worry about that with my son until he got older). That non-stop, one way talking is annoying and also a symptom. I call it "monologuing." My sister works as an aide with autistic kids and it actually has an official name (the non-top, one way talking), but I forgot what she calls it. Those are big red flags. THose kids are very socially inappropriate and don't care how bad they look to others in public because they don't even know how bad they look in public. Here is an online Pervasive Developmental Disorder (PDD) assessmesnt test you can look at, but I would definitely see a neuropsychologist. They are good at spotting things that other diagnosticians miss simply because they take a very long time in their evaluation and look for everything. The prognosis, if caught young and given good interventions, is excellent. Read my post about my son going on a date! Never thought I'd see the day. [URL]http://www.childbrain.com/pddassess.html[/URL] [/QUOTE]
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