These autistic Canadians say U.S. rhetoric has been unhelpful, focus should be on early diagnoses

News Room
By News Room 16 Min Read

TORONTO – By the time Moira Robertson got an official autism diagnosis at 23 years old, she had missed out on a lot of the government-funded support she desperately needed. 

Her childhood and adolescence is marked by painful memories. She stopped going to school after teachers called the police to handle her, and kids peed on her student council posters and publicly declared that something was wrong with her. She wet the bed as a teenager, collapsed into public meltdowns, and felt chronically misunderstood. 

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