mohsart wrote:
Were there levels of autism before aspergers "became" autism level 1?
If not, it's mostly just a change of terms.
As for High Functioning, it has AFAIK never* been a recognized term, and I'd wish people stopped using it.
* In the beginning it meant someone with an IQ of >70, I mean in the modern world
/Mats
As I understand it there were no "levels" of autism prior to 1994.
When Kanner discovered autism in the Fifties and early Sixties he only used the term for what is now called level three, basket case, type autistics. They expanded the diagnosis into a "spectrum" and began using "aspergers" as a diagnosis, and placed it into the spectrum, in 1994.
So you suddenly no longer had to be an extreme "classic" "Kanner type" autistic to be classified as "autistic". And the terms high and low and middle functioning began to be used colloquially, but not officially. Those, like myself, who were diagnosed then as aspergers would be similar to those then called "high functioning autistics". The only real difference would be back in your history as an infant...whether or not you learned to talk at the normal time. Speech delay would mean you were "autistic" (but colloquially 'high functioning'). No speech delay would get you the aspie label.
Then a few years ago they got rid of aspergers as a seperate thing. And began using the levels thing (1,2,3) for serverity. Which amounts to the same things as saying "low, middle, and high, functioning", but this time making it official and clinical and medical.