posted on 2016-07-14, 10:51authored byMichelle J. O'Reilly, Jessica N. Lester, Tom Muskett, Khalid Karim
Integral to the diagnosis of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is the initial assessment through
which the existence of a ‘problem’ is first ascertained. Despite this, there remains limited
research on this early part of the diagnostic pathway. In this paper, we utilised conversation
analysis to examine relevant issues in relation to the practitioner-family interactions that take
place within this initial assessment context. Our findings illustrated that parents typically first
raised the possibility of the presence of an ASD diagnosis through ‘building a case’, which
professionals were then able to ratify or negate. Further, we found that the assessments
unfolded sequentially and clinical decisions were typically reached through a distinctive
pattern of interaction. These findings have important implications for clinical practice,
including for the study of ASD assessments and diagnosis.
History
Citation
Discourse Studies, 2017,19(1), pp. 69-83
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF MEDICINE, BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES AND PSYCHOLOGY/MBSP Non-Medical Departments/Neuroscience, Psychology and Behaviour