CresA wrote:
Yes, I do know this is not a disease that can be cured with a pill. Its for the symptoms.
Which symptoms are you trying to treat, exactly?
Bear in mind, at the age of 16 her neurology is far from stabilizing yet. While this doesn't mean that she can "get over" her aspergers, it DOES mean that any psychoactive medication you give to her may have
serious and potentially unknown long-term side effects, especially because the FDA isn't too terribly hot on testing things on kids before giving them the green light.
I'd read up on mindfulness as a method of therapy for your daughter - help her achieve active awareness of her self and mental state, which in turn will allow her to better modify or change behaviors that are undesirable to her. As a willing, and most importantly,
knowing participant in modifying her own behavior, the therapy has a much better chance of sticking with her and improving her long-term overall mood-state than other therapies such as ABA.
If you're absolutely intent on the idea of medicating your daughter for aspergers, well, the good news is that a potential medication
does exist.
http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2013/05/22/f ... ic-adults/The bad news, of course, is that ecstasy/MDMA is both mostly-untested and illegal. So make of that what you will.
CresA wrote:
She's been in a weekly social skills group for five years - so I am not just using a pill to help her. Individual therapy has not worked well for her. She has an excellent social skills group / teacher that has been better than any therapy.
This is ideal. If it's working, keep with this. I guarantee it'll help her more in the long-term than any medication, illegal or otherwise.