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Brief Report

Demographic Factors Relate to Autism Diagnostic Certainty: Implications for Enhancing Equitable Diagnosis Among Youth

, , , , &
Published online: 03 Apr 2023
 

ABSTRACT

Objective

Autism diagnosis is fraught with inequities, including misdiagnosis and delayed identification that disproportionately affect minoritized youth. Aspects of clinician decision-making, particularly diagnostic certainty, may contribute to these inequities. Little is known about how closely clinician certainty corresponds with autistic traits, nor whether certainty relates to socio-demographic factors.

Method

Autistic youth from the Simons Simplex Collection (N = 2,853) completed assessments after which clinicians rated how certain they were that the child met autism diagnostic criteria. Core clinical factors included clinician-observed (Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule; ADOS) and parent-reported autistic traits (Social Communication Questionnaire), and an overall IQ score.

Results

Clinician certainty was moderately positively associated with parent-reported and observed autistic traits and was just as strongly negatively associated with IQ. Socio-demographic factors significantly associated with certainty, even accounting for clinical measures. Lower income and older child age related to less certainty. In contrast, clinicians rated higher certainty for youth identified as Hispanic, Black or African American, or Asian. Race and income also moderated the concordance between certainty with clinical factors. The agreement between higher ADOS scores and higher certainty was significantly weaker for lower-income families. The association between lower IQ and higher certainty was non-significant for Asian youth.

Conclusions

Diagnostic certainty ratings do not necessarily correspond closely with the level of autistic traits, and clinician perception of autism diagnosis may be related to demographic factors. Caution is needed when relying on clinician certainty to inform diagnosis. Future research on diagnostic practices is urgently needed among diverse and minoritized communities.

Acknowledgments

We are grateful to all of the families at the participating Simons Simplex Collection sites, as well as the principal investigators (A. Beaudet, R. Bernier, J. Constantino, E. Cook, E. Fombonne, D. Geschwind, R. Goin-Kochel, E. Hanson, D. Grice, A. Klin, D. Ledbetter, C. Lord, C. Martin, D. Martin, R. Maxim, J. Miles, O. Ousley, K. Pelphrey, B. Peterson, J. Piggot, C. Saulnier, M. State, W. Stone, J. Sutcliffe, C. Walsh, Z. Warren, E. Wijsman). We appreciate obtaining access to phenotypic data on SFARI Base.

Disclosure Statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Data Availability Statement

Data were drawn from the Simons Simplex Collection, which can be accessed by approved researchers at base.sfari.org.

Supplementary material

Supplemental material for this article can be accessed online at https://doi.org/10.1080/15374416.2023.2191282

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