thread: Oppositional Defiant Disorder- ADD-Mild Autism

Hybrid View

Previous Post Previous Post   Next Post Next Post
  1. #1
    Registered User

    Oct 2009
    VIC
    881

    Oppositional Defiant Disorder- ADD-Mild Autism

    aka ODD.
    My 5 year old is currently being moniterd & assessed for this as well as ADD & possibly MIld Autisim the last one i dont agree with as she speaks just fine although she didnt start till she was 2 and didnt walk till 18 months old.
    Can anyone give me any advice or support.
    Some days with her end up with me in tears.

  2. #2
    Lucy in the sky with diamonds.

    Jan 2005
    Funky Town, Vic
    7,070

    You might like to poke your head in here - https://www.bellybelly.com.au/forums...atter-2-a.html

  3. #3
    Lucy in the sky with diamonds.

    Jan 2005
    Funky Town, Vic
    7,070

    Oh and I know how you feel - I just had a mini-mental so I put both kids in the bath and poured myself a vino....

  4. #4
    Registered User

    Feb 2007
    ACT
    681

    Hi Butterflypirate,

    my dd was assesed at the same age as your daughter for all three, her devlopment was similar in didn't realy speak till 2 and started walking with support at 16 months and on own by 18 months.

    She was finally diagnosed ODD, i have learnt that at times it is best to let her be and then sort it out latter, we went threw having a psycologist (spelling) come to the school and try and sort out a program for her. In the end i changed schools and they have been great. One thing I have discovered is not telling her teacher she has ODD this year as actually helped, as the past 3 years the teachers have then blamed her for everything. She is now in year 4 and actually controls most of it herself, she will say mum I need to be by myself.

    Diet does play a bit of a role in it to. We had a feelings chart where she could put the pointer on how she was feeling to help her other siblings to know when not to go near her, this helped heaps and she used one at school for awhile whiched helped to.

    If you have any questions don't hesitate to ask.

  5. #5
    Registered User

    Oct 2009
    VIC
    881

    Hi Butterflypirate,

    my dd was assesed at the same age as your daughter for all three, her devlopment was similar in didn't realy speak till 2 and started walking with support at 16 months and on own by 18 months.

    She was finally diagnosed ODD, i have learnt that at times it is best to let her be and then sort it out latter, we went threw having a psycologist (spelling) come to the school and try and sort out a program for her. In the end i changed schools and they have been great. One thing I have discovered is not telling her teacher she has ODD this year as actually helped, as the past 3 years the teachers have then blamed her for everything. She is now in year 4 and actually controls most of it herself, she will say mum I need to be by myself.

    Diet does play a bit of a role in it to. We had a feelings chart where she could put the pointer on how she was feeling to help her other siblings to know when not to go near her, this helped heaps and she used one at school for awhile whiched helped to.

    If you have any questions don't hesitate to ask.
    Thank you, my girls go to a private school & they have an in house psychologist so i am pretty confident they will be great with her if this is what she has, Some days i find myself in tears its so hard dealing with her.

    Its so nice to have support, im sick of hearing "its just normal 5yr old behaviour" ive been hearing the same "its normal" thing from people for years im sick of it being brushed off when i try speak about it to people i have noone to vent to, noone understands the difficulty.

  6. #6
    Registered User

    Apr 2008
    4,427



    I am a teacher and I have a boy in my class diagnosed with ODD, ADDHD and mild autism. If I am honest I will say he is hard work and it is draining but I am trying and some strategies I have put in place for him (he is 8yrs old) are: he has a stress ball that he can hold anytime he wants, I have him on a sensory mat which kind of helps with his need to pick at things, he has a chill out corner he can go to in the room. He doesnt have to ask me, he can just go there and I know to leave him. He also needs to know exactly what is going on in the day, hates unexpected change, so I clearly lay out picture cards for him on black cardboard. We have feeling cards as well.

    I still have a lot to learn about it all.

  7. #7
    Registered User
    Add ~clover~ on Facebook

    Sep 2007
    travelling
    9,557

    Hi hun. I haven't read all the replies, but I wanted to send you
    I went through a really tough time with my DD1 when she was 6. She was assessed for ODD, but as she was behaving at school she didn't have it.
    She is still a very defiant child & I am still having a really really hard time with her most of the time, but I think (hope) it'll get better. (She moved out the other day!! )
    There is a huge scale of autism, so I'd let them look more into that. JIC. It can be very mild.
    The only advice I can give you is try to keep calm & take each day as it comes.

  8. #8
    Registered User

    Oct 2009
    VIC
    881

    I know in my heart that this more than a phase she has been like this since birth seriously she used to scream and scream and started hurting herself from a very young age, the noises startd as soon as she found her voice.
    I am desperate for answers, I have typed her symptoms into a database and they all bring up some form of autisic trait, I couldnt have autistic child could I that doesnt happen in my family, Im a dance teacher & on a thursday night I teach disabled children/adults, a few with autism and Monsta is nothing like them, she functions, she speaks, yet yes she hates loud noises and is emotional like an autisic child, its all so confusing, I cry over it all the time as I feel Ive failed her.