Jonathan Green is professor of child and adolescent psychiatry at the University of Manchester in the United Kingdom and an honorary consultant child and adolescent psychiatrist. He is also a long-practicing clinician. In this interview, he discusses the genesis of his recent article, “Debate: Neurodiversity, autism and healthcare,” and how it has been received by colleagues and the neurodiversity self-advocate community. There have been two commentaries published in response to Green’s article, with a third still in production.
The story of autism research in Australia: A conversation with Cheryl Dissanayake
New journals seek to fill neurodiversity gap
Writing a 'new history of autism'
What it's like to be a Black autism researcher
Spectrum stories: Life in lockdown with autism
Spectrum Stories: What social touch says about autism
Spectrum Stories: How social media aids discovery and diagnosis of autism-linked conditions
Spectrum Stories: The benefits of genetic testing in autism
Spectrum Stories: Tapping intelligence in minimally verbal people with autism
Spectrum Stories: Seeing through an autistic person's eyes
Spectrum Stories: Resetting the autistic brain
Spectrum Stories: Understanding autism's suicide risk
Spectrum Stories: Gaming autism treatments
Spectrum Stories: Autism, in a manner of speaking
Spectrum Stories: Talking about autism mouse models
Spectrum Stories: Camouflaging autism traits
Spectrum Stories: Shifting cultural views about autism abroad
Spectrum Stories: Where autism meets sleeplessness
Spectrum Stories: The overlap between autism and anxiety
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