Psychiatric Bulletin (2006) 30: 316. doi: 10.1192/pb.30.8.316
© 2006 The Royal College of Psychiatrists
Psychiatric Bulletin (2006) 30: 316
© 2006 The Royal College of Psychiatrists
Psychiatric Services for Adolescents and Adults with Asperger Syndrome and Other Autistic-Spectrum Disorders
Council Report CR136, April 2006, Royal College of Psychiatrists, £7.50, 40 pp
Autistic-spectrum disorders (ASD) are a complex group of developmental
disorders frequently associated with comorbid psychiatric disorder, colouring
their presentation and complicating their management. Presenting over a wide
range of age and ability, they are encountered in all psychiatric
specialties.
This report is a consensus view of the psychiatric services required for
many with ASD in adolescence and adulthood. The focus is often on diagnosis,
but this is only one part of a wider process of multidisciplinary assessment
that should then flow on to management. Although the report focuses narrowly
on psychiatry, it recognises that this is only one part of a more extensive
range of services. It is a preliminary exercise, intended to inform the
broader, multidisciplinary and multiagency approaches that are under way
across the whole of the UK. It is addressed to psychiatrists, stakeholders in
the development of ASD services and commissioners of adolescent and adult
services, across all the psychiatric specialties.
After a description of the syndrome, its comorbidity and epidemiology, the
report distinguishes diagnosis from the fuller, multidisciplinary assessment.
Reviewing the methodology and difficulties of this process, it concludes that
all psychiatrists should be able to recognise the syndrome, diagnosing it in
clear-cut cases, and be aware of its implications. This has to be the subject
of postgraduate training at all levels, from basic psychiatric training
through to the consultant's continuing professional development.
Besides the lack of services specific to this population, people with ASD
are poorly served by most standard services - in particular, those who are too
old for adolescent services and too able for learning disability services. For
those whose diagnosis is less straightforward or whose clinical management is
more complex, there needs to be access to local specialist expertise and,
where necessary, to tertiary specialist services. This applies particularly to
the provision for psychiatric admission, whether as day-patients or
in-patients, for a group of people for whom the usual clinical environment can
be distressing and unhelpful. Psychiatric services need to improve through a
combination of training, better liaison between the specialties and the
development of specialist interest and tertiary services, the last including
the development of autism-specific services both in the statutory and in the
independent sectors.
Psychiatric services are overstretched by existing demands, so that any
improvement will only come about if driven by service commissioners who
recognise the shortfall and specifically support further developments.