RUSSIA AND AUTISM

Code: 64B620F9830421  Price: 4,000   60 Pages     Chapter 1-5    6468 Views

The history of autism research in Russia began in 1926 when G. Sukhareva published the chapter, which is believed to be the first description of the Asperger syndrome (Ssucharewa and Wolff 1996). Several years later, Simson described a similar condition for preschool children (Simson 1929). These were accurate accounts of autism manifestations that the authors called schizoid psychopathy, and the clinical elaboration of autistic features was seen as formation of schizophrenic personality. For many years, autism had been considered as a part of the schizophrenic complex of symptoms until the first classification of autism disorders was developed in Mental Health Research Center in 1997. Its publication coincided with the decision of the Russian Ministry of Public Health to follow the International Classification of Diseases (ICD-10). On the one hand, the national classification and ICD-10 have regularized the diagnosis of autism and other pervasive developmental disorders. On the other hand, patients with psychotic symptoms fell into three diagnostic groups: atypical childhood psychosis (F84.1) and two categories introduced in the Russian adaptation of ICD-10 (1999) – childhood psychosis (F84.02) within the group childhood autism (F84.0) and childhood schizophrenia (F20.8xx3). Especially differentiation between F84.1 and F20.8xx3 remains diagnostically problematic (Simashkova et al. 2013); thus, it is likely that many patients on the spectrum are diagnosed with schizophrenia. Moreover, autism and autism spectrum disorders are very rarely diagnosed in adults and remain a child phenomenon in clinical contexts and public understanding. A detailed account of the clinical tradition of autism understanding in Russia is given in Bashina (1999), Tiganov and Bashina (2005), and Psychiatry (2011). Since 2003, a specialized Russian-language journal Autizm i narusheniya razvitiya [Autism and Development Disorders] has been published in Moscow. It appears four times a year and covers a wide range of educational and clinical topics addressed to professionals and parents/caregivers. Along with original materials, it occasionally includes translations of articles and educational resources published abroad ).


Terms of Use: This is an academic paper. Students should NOT copy our materials word to word, as we DO NOT encourage Plagiarism. Only use as a guide in developing your original research work. Thanks.

Disclaimer: All undertaking works, records, and reports posted on this website, eprojectguide.com are the property/copyright of their individual proprietors. They are for research reference/direction purposes and the works are publicly supported. Do not present another person’s work as your own to maintain a strategic distance from counterfeiting its results. Use it as a guide and not duplicate the work in exactly the same words (verbatim). eprojectguide.com is a vault of exploration works simply like academia.edu, researchgate.net, scribd.com, docsity.com, course hero, and numerous different stages where clients transfer works. The paid membership on eprojectguide.com is a method by which the site is kept up to help Open Education. In the event that you see your work posted here, and you need it to be eliminated/credited, it would be ideal if you call us on +2348064699975 or send us a mail along with the web address linked to the work, to eprojectguide@gmail.com. We will answer to and honor each solicitation. Kindly note notification it might take up to 24 – 48 hours to handle your solicitation.

Material Information
  • ₦4,000.00 1 Price:
  • 60 2 No. of Pages:
  • 5 3 No. of Chapters:
  • No 4 Has Implementation:
FOR ENQUIRIES WE ARE AVAILABLE 24/7

Contact us on

DEPARTMENT
LAW