More adults are wondering if they have autism. Here are tips to seek a
diagnosis
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[February 18, 2025]
By KENYA HUNTER
ATLANTA (AP) — Natasha Nelson, a 35-year old entrepreneur in Stone
Mountain, Georgia, didn't have an innate sense of social norms. She
didn't know why people meeting for the first time would choose to engage
in small talk instead of deep conversations, or why people like to make
their beds.
Then, a few years ago, she was diagnosed with autism, just after her
youngest daughter received the same.
“If your life has always felt like it was in chaos and you don’t feel
comfortable and you don’t feel like you thrive and you just feel like
you’re constantly surviving and going from one thing to the next, what
you got to lose?” Nelson said, encouraging people to seek a diagnosis.
Common signs of autism include trouble with social communication and a
fixation on certain routines or topics — Nelson says “people have become
my special interest now” — and may go unnoticed during someone’s
childhood.
But it can be costly and difficult to obtain an autism diagnosis later
in life due to a shortage of medical professionals trained to work
specifically with adults. Here's more information on what you should
know about adult autism diagnoses.
What is autism and when is it usually diagnosed?
Autism spectrum disorder is a range of intellectual, language and social
difficulties, like rigidly following routines, having fixed or obsessive
interests and struggling to hold eye contact or understand nonverbal
communication. Autism is typically diagnosed during childhood, and the
American Academy of Pediatrics recommends all children be screened as
early as 18 months.
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Why are more adults being diagnosed with autism?
More adults have sought insight on their own neurodiversity in the last
decade — often after their children are diagnosed or after seeing social
media posts. A study published last year in JAMA Network Open showed a
452% increase in autism diagnoses among adults age 26 to 34 from 2011 to
2022.
Some traits of autism can go unnoticed until adulthood, when there are
new social demands. Others may have learned how to hide certain
behaviors, known as masking.
“Adults have learned to compensate over time,” said Whitney Ence, a
psychologist at the University of California San Francisco who works
with autistic adults. “They may have learned like ‘I can’t display that
in public, and so I do that in private.’"
There's also an overlap of symptoms between various disorders like ADHD
and OCD that can complicate an autism diagnosis due to difficulties with
nonverbal social cues or executive functions like attention span,
working memory and problem-solving.
What are the symptoms of autism in adults?
Symptoms present differently for everyone, and many of the traits are
common for people without autism, like enjoying routines or enjoying
going down rabbit holes of information.
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Natasha Nelson, who was diagnosed with autism in August 2023, just
after her youngest daughter was also diagnosed, sits in a sensory
room she uses to calm her children in her Stone Mountain, Ga. home
on Friday, Feb. 14, 2025. (AP Photo/Ben Gray)
 But to meet the diagnostic
definition of autism, the symptoms must cause significant
impairment, said Dr. Arthur Westover, a psychiatrist who specializes
in autism at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center.
“We’re human beings in general. We like routines ... just having a
bit of pleasure and feeling better with routines does not mean
you’re autistic," Westover said. "It goes a little bit deeper than
that.”
Russell Lehmann, 34, has lived with his autism diagnosis for more
than 20 years. The motivational speaker has routines that he
describes as both comfortable and stressful. Eating the same food
and buying the same groceries, he said, brings him comfort. But if
he skips going to the gym for an hour and a half every day, he
becomes overwhelmed with feelings of depression and failure.
“It’s like no gym, no day,” he said. “... My routine is an
incredibly existential burden, because every night I go to bed
knowing I have to do a routine I do not like simply to function.”
How does a diagnosis work?
While there are various online screening tools, autism is a complex
diagnosis, so experts recommend talking to your primary care
physician for a psychiatry referral.
That psychiatrist might want to interview people who were present in
your early childhood, like family and friends, who can attest to
symptoms being present at that time.
Some psychiatrists may refer you to a psychologist, who can give you
a standardized diagnostic autism test or will use their own clinical
judgement. There is no brain scan or blood test for autism.
Getting an autism diagnosis as an adult can be costly and take some
time. Westover said there's a major shortage of specialists who work
with autistic adults. Nelson's diagnosis took three years and she
paid more than $3,000 out-of-pocket.
Ence also suggests that you ask yourself a few questions when
considering getting a professional diagnosis, and to know that you
may run into a waitlist: “What is leading me down this pathway to
think that I need a professional diagnosis? Do I need access to
services? Are there services I don’t have available to me?”
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