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GPs under fire for striking too many people with autism off their lists

Posted: 28 August 2003 | Subscribe Online


Fears have been raised by campaigners that a significant number of people with autism are being struck of GPs' lists, Community Care learned this week.

Paul Shattock, director of the Autism Research Unit at the University of Sunderland and secretary of the World Autism Organisation, said he was aware of many people with autistic spectrum disorders who had been struck off by GPs.

He said that professionals needed to receive more training in order for services to improve.

Colin Revell, a disability rights activist who has Asperger's syndrome, a condition at the higher functioning end of the autistic spectrum, has been struck off by seven GPs since he was diagnosed with the disorder in 1995. He was struck off for the seventh time last week.
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Revell said he felt like he was going through a "revolving door" and that GPs did not understand his needs. "As soon as I ask to be referred to an autism specialist we come into conflict," he said.

Shattock said people with Asperger's syndrome presented particular problems for GPs: "Often their difficulties are hidden and people are fooled by their language skills and think they haven't got problems." He said this led to GPs and other professionals, including social workers, believing that such people were "trying to fool the system".

Shattock said body language was also a problem, with people with Asperger's syndrome being taught to make eye contact when speaking to people. This sometimes comes over as staring. "It's very unnerving for doctors to constantly have someone making eye contact," he said.
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Andrew Powell, a project officer for the National Autistic Society, said that some people with Asperger's syndrome did not get the support in other areas of their lives to enable them to know how to act in a GP surgery. He agreed that GPs needed more training in how to conduct interviews and communicate with people with autistic spectrum disorders.

Research by the National Autistic Society conducted last year and covering 448 GPs found that, while people with autism may now be part of any GP's caseload, many were ill-equipped to provide effective treatment for patients with an autistic spectrum disorder.

A spokesperson for Revell's former GPs said they were unable to comment on individual cases.

GPs on Autism available from www.nas.org.uk


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