More diagnoses due to less contextualization

In recent years, we have seen a sharp increase in autism diagnoses and other psychiatric classifications.
An important part of this can be explained by the fact that less and less attention is paid to context in society and care.

Two structural causes

Consequence

The number of people with context blindness remains relatively constant, but:

Critical note

More diagnoses does not automatically mean that there is "more autism" or "more depression".
It could just as easily point to a society that takes less account of differences in context sensitivity.

Conclusion

Overdiagnosis occurs when we contextualize too little.
The more we integrate context into care and society, the less there is a need for psychiatric labels.


See also: LinkedIn article by Koen Thomeer: <em>More ASD requests, less context</em>