Women and Girls with Autism Spectrum Disorder: Understanding Life Experiences from Early Childhood to Old Age

Front Cover
Jessica Kingsley Publishers, May 21, 2015 - Family & Relationships - 248 pages

The difference that being female makes to the diagnosis, life and experiences of a person with an Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) has largely gone unresearched and unreported until recently. In this book Sarah Hendrickx has collected both academic research and personal stories about girls and women on the autism spectrum to present a picture of their feelings, thoughts and experiences at each stage of their lives.

Outlining how autism presents differently and can hide itself in females and what the likely impact will be for them throughout their lifespan, the book looks at how females with ASD experience diagnosis, childhood, education, adolescence, friendships, sexuality, employment, pregnancy and parenting, and aging. It will provide invaluable guidance for the professionals who support these girls and women and it will offer women with autism a guiding light in interpreting and understanding their own life experiences through the experiences of others.

 

Contents

Acknowledgements
12
Preface
13
Introduction
15
Chapter 1 Women Get Autism Too
22
Chapter 2 Considering Autism Spectrum Disorder in Females
32
Chapter 3 Infancy and Childhood
48
Chapter 4 Childhood Relationships
75
Chapter 5 Adolescence
85
Chapter 10 Sexuality and Gender Identity
152
Chapter 11 Personal Relationships
164
Chapter 12 Pregnancy and Parenting
180
Chapter 13 Health and Wellbeing
198
Chapter 14 Employment
213
Chapter 15 Ageing with Autism
219
Chapter 16 The Ideal Life
231
Chapter 17 Final Words
234

Chapter 6 Education
96
Chapter 7 Discovering Autism as an Adult
117
Chapter 8 You Dont Look Autistic
125
Chapter 9 Adult Relationships
143
References
237
Index
243
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2015)

Sarah Hendrickx has a diagnosis of Autism Spectrum Disorder. She is author of six books on the subject of autism and speaks at conferences worldwide. Sarah runs Hendrickx Associates, an autism and neurodiversity focused training, consultancy and support business. She lives West Sussex, UK, in a very crowded house with her (mostly autistic) family and autistic partner, Keith, and likes to travel to remote places on her bicycle to escape from them whenever she can.

Bibliographic information