Magnificent Minds: Demystifying Autism with Dr. Suzanne Goh, MD, BCBA
In this episode, I'm taking you inside one of the most important and under-recognized issues in autism: why girls are so consistently missed, often for years, sometimes for decades. I open with a story about a seven-year-old who loves cats, reads chapter books on her own, and holds it together all day at school, until she walks in the front door and falls apart. Her teachers say she's fine. Her parents know something is going on, but they don't have a name for it yet. I walk you through the brain science and the history that explains how this happened (almost all of the foundational autism research, going back to Leo Kanner's work in 1943, was conducted on boys, so the screening tools and diagnostic checklists were built on a mainly male picture), and more importantly, what autism actually looks like in girls once you know what to look for. I break down a landmark 2026 study published in the British Medical Journal that tracked nearly 2.7 million people in Sweden over 35 years and found that by age 20, the male-to-female ratio approaches 1 to 1, nearly equal. If autism occurs at roughly the same rate in girls and boys, why are girls being missed during the exact window when recognition and support would make the biggest difference? We cover the four key differences that make autism harder to see in girls: social motivation and why an autistic girl often wants connection deeply yet works extraordinarily hard to navigate it, special interests and why a passion for animals or fiction draws praise instead of recognition, masking and the cost of performing neurotypical behavior for years (three out of four autistic women in one study said camouflaging directly affected their ability to get a diagnosis, compared to one in four men), and the misdiagnosis maze of anxiety, depression, OCD, and more that so often comes first. I close with the part I find most heartbreaking and most hopeful: what happens when a girl is finally seen, and how the single question "what kind of environment and support would have helped me thrive?" can change everything. I also give you a concrete list of things worth paying attention to if you have a daughter, a student, a niece, or a patient, so you can see what you couldn't see before. If today's episode made you think of someone in your life, I hope you'll follow that instinct. The earlier we recognize autistic qualities in girls, the less of that road they have to walk alone.
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