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The relationship between camouflaging and mental health: Are there differences among subgroups in autistic adults?

Wikke J van der PuttenAudrey Jj MolTulsi A RadhoeCarolien TorenvlietJoost A Agelink van RentergemAnnabeth P GroenmanHilde M Geurts
Published in: Autism : the international journal of research and practice (2023)
When autistic people use strategies to hide their autistic characteristics, we call this camouflaging. Autistic adults suggested that camouflaging can result in mental health difficulties. That is, people who report to camouflage also report mental health difficulties. However, since there are many differences between autistic people, this relationship may also differ between subgroups. Therefore, in this study we investigated whether camouflaging and mental health difficulties are related and whether this relationship is equal for all autistic adults. For this study, 352 autistic adults aged 30-84 years filled in the Dutch Camouflaging Autistic Traits Questionnaire to measure camouflaging and the Symptom Checklist-90 Revised to measure mental health difficulties. We found that camouflaging was moderately related to mental health difficulties. This means that people who report more camouflaging also report more mental health difficulties. When we looked closer, we found that this relationship was strong for only a small subgroup of autistic adults. In most other autistic adults, there was a small or no relationship between camouflaging and mental health difficulties. Therefore, it is important that clinicians are aware of camouflaging and its possible relationship with mental health difficulties, but that they do not generalize the negative consequences to everyone.
Keyphrases
  • mental health
  • mental illness
  • gene expression
  • randomized controlled trial
  • palliative care
  • high resolution
  • study protocol
  • genome wide