***NHS England has published a new report which shows one in five children and young people between the ages of eight and 25 have a probable mental disorder.https://digital.nhs.uk/data-and-information/publications/statistical/mental-health-of-children-and-young-people-in-england/2023-wave-4-follow-up***
(FROM NICE GUIDELINES)
other differentials to be considered : Mental and behavioural disorders:
attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD)
mood disorder
anxiety disorder
attachment disorders
oppositional defiant disorder (ODD)
conduct disorder
obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD)
psychosis.
Conditions in which there is developmental regression:
Rett syndrome
epileptic encephalopathy.
Other conditions:
severe hearing impairment
severe visual impairment
maltreatment
selective mutism.
Do not rely on any autism-specific diagnostic tool alone to diagnose autism.
Be aware that in some children and young people there may be uncertainty about the diagnosis of autism, particularly in:
children younger than 24 months
children or young people with a developmental age of less than 18 months
children or young people for whom there is a lack of available information about their early life (for example, some looked-after or adopted children)
older teenagers
children or young people with a complex coexisting mental health disorder (for example ADHD, conduct disorder, a possible attachment disorder), sensory impairment (for example severe hearing or visual impairment), or a motor disorder such as cerebral palsy.
Consider whether the child or young person may have any of the following as a coexisting condition, and if suspected carry out appropriate assessments and referrals:
Mental and behaviour problems and disorders:
ADHD
anxiety disorders and phobias
mood disorders
oppositional defiant behaviour
tics or Tourette syndrome
OCD
self-injurious behaviour.
Neurodevelopmental problems and disorders:
global delay or a learning (intellectual) disability
motor coordination problems or DCD
academic learning problems, for example in literacy or numeracy
speech and language disorder.
Medical or genetic problems and disorders:
epilepsy and epileptic encephalopathy
chromosome disorders
genetic abnormalities, including fragile X
tuberous sclerosis
muscular dystrophy
neurofibromatosis.
Functional problems and disorders:
feeding problems, including restricted diets
urinary incontinence or enuresis
constipation, altered bowel habit, faecal incontinence or encopresis
sleep disturbances
vision or hearing impairment.
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Dr Gaurav Kohli(GMC Number:6029901 & RCPsych Membership Number :810969) : Research and Academic Psychiatry Blog| CAMHS Consultancy |Evidence Based Medicine
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