The Intersection of Autism and Transgender and Nonbinary Identities: Community and Academic Dialogue on Research and Advocacy.

Finn V Gratton, John F Strang, Minneh Song, Kate Cooper, Aimilia Kallitsounaki, Meng-Chuan Lai, Wenn Lawson, Anna I R van der Miesen, Harriette E Wimms
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Abstract

Many transgender people are autistic. Community expressions of the autism transgender intersection abound. Some commentators have questioned the proportional overrepresentation of autism among gender-diverse people, suggesting these individuals may not be truly autistic or truly transgender. However, increasing evidence challenges assertions that deny the authenticity of co-occurring autistic and transgender identities. Specifically, research by authors of this article indicates autistic transgender people show neurophenotypes generally consistent with cisgender autistic people and implicit gender phenotypes consistent with nonautistic transgender people. This article features a dialogue between eight leading experts in the field of intersectional autism and gender diversity, including clinicians, researchers, community advocates, and experts who are themselves autistic transgender. Key topics of discussion included: how research findings on autism and gender diversity inform respectful and supportive responses to autistic transgender people; the benefits and harms of increased societal attention toward the autism transgender intersection; and research and advocacy priorities. The expert panel concluded the following: (1) it is important to respect transgender autistic people's wellness and resilience, while also acknowledging the pathologization and stigmatization they face; (2) autistic gender-diverse people are experts of their own identity and should be involved in all aspects of research and clinical care; (3) research is needed to understand the disparities autistic transgender people face; (4) attempts to restrict autistic transgender people's access to gender care are unsupported by existing research; (5) adult gender care may benefit from incorporating universal design principles and neurodiversity-affirming strategies to reduce barriers to care and improve clinician-client communication in treatment delivery and the informed consent process; (6) cross-cultural and cross-societal research will improve best care practices in diverse contexts; (7) research and advocacy must be inclusive across ethnoracial identities, including in leadership and perspectives represented; and (8) a life span developmental framework is needed for adult research in this field.

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自闭症与跨性别和非二元身份的交集:关于研究和宣传的社区与学术对话。
许多变性人都患有自闭症。自闭症跨性别者的社区表现比比皆是。一些评论家对自闭症患者在不同性别人群中所占比例过高提出质疑,认为这些人可能不是真正的自闭症患者或真正的跨性别者。然而,越来越多的证据对否认自闭症和跨性别身份共存真实性的论断提出了质疑。具体而言,本文作者的研究表明,自闭症跨性别者表现出的神经表型与顺性别自闭症患者基本一致,而内隐性别表型则与非自闭症跨性别者一致。本文介绍了自闭症和性别多样性交叉领域的八位顶尖专家之间的对话,其中包括临床医生、研究人员、社区倡导者以及本身就是自闭症跨性别者的专家。讨论的主要议题包括:有关自闭症和性别多样性的研究成果如何为自闭症变性人提供尊重和支持性的应对措施;社会对自闭症变性人交叉问题日益关注的益处和害处;以及研究和宣传的优先事项。专家小组得出以下结论(1)必须尊重跨性别自闭症患者的健康和恢复能力,同时也要承认他们所面临的病理化和污名化问题;(2)自闭症性别多元化患者是他们自身身份的专家,应该参与研究和临床护理的各个方面;(3)需要开展研究以了解自闭症跨性别患者所面临的差异;(4)限制自闭症跨性别患者获得性别护理的尝试没有得到现有研究的支持;(5) 成人性别护理可受益于纳入通用设计原则和肯定神经多样性的策略,以减少护理障碍,并在提供治疗和知情同意过程中改善临床医生与客户之间的沟通;(6) 跨文化和跨社会研究将改善不同背景下的最佳护理实践;(7) 研究和宣传必须具有跨种族身份的包容性,包括在领导力和所代表的观点方面;以及 (8) 该领域的成人研究需要一个终身发展框架。
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