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'I am autistic – there are so many things wrong with how it is spoken about'
Western Mail
|October 10, 2025
It is time to rethink the notion of an 'autism spectrum', says public health expert Aimee Grant, who has the condition
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THE phrases "autism spectrum" or "on the spectrum" have become part of everyday language. They are often used as different ways of referring to someone who is "neurodivergent.
The term was coined in the 1980s by psychiatrist Dr Lorna Wing, whose work transformed how autism was understood in the UK. At the time, her "autism spectrum" concept was groundbreaking. Instead of seeing autism as a rare, narrowly defined condition, she recognised a wide range of traits and experiences.
But the idea of a single spectrum, which stretches from "mild" to "severe", may be misleading. And some autism experts, including me, argue the term has outlived its usefulness.
When most people hear the word "spectrum", they may picture a straight line, like colours arranged from red to violet. Applied to autism, this suggests autistic people can be ranked from "more autistic" to "less autistic". But that's not how autism works.
Autism is made up of many different traits and needs, which show up in unique combinations. Some autistic people rely heavily on routine, while others find comfort in repetitive movements known as "stimming". And some have an intense focus on particular topics, a concept researchers call "monotropism".
There are also known links with physical conditions such as hypermobility. Because autism is made up of all these different elements, there can be no single line on which every autistic person is placed.
This story is from the October 10, 2025 edition of Western Mail.
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