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. 2023 Apr;27(3):788-795.
doi: 10.1177/13623613221117914. Epub 2022 Aug 11.

'Autistic person' or 'person with autism'? Person-first language preference in Dutch adults with autism and parents

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'Autistic person' or 'person with autism'? Person-first language preference in Dutch adults with autism and parents

Riley Buijsman et al. Autism. 2023 Apr.

Abstract

There are different words to describe people with an autism diagnosis. For instance, we can put the person before autism (e.g. 'person with autism'), or we can put autism before the person (e.g. 'autistic person'). Previous research showed that autistic adults in English-speaking countries generally liked it better when autism is placed before the person. Yet, people also greatly differ in the words they like and dislike. In this study, we examined word preference in Dutch autistic adults (n = 1026; 16-84 years; 57% women) and parents of autistic children (n = 286). Via an online questionnaire, we asked our participants to select one term for autistic people that they liked best. The results showed that most adults with autism (68.3%) and parents (82.5%) preferred to put the person before autism. Younger adults, with a higher intelligence, and with more autistic traits, were a bit more likely to put autism before the person. We conclude that there are large differences in the words that people prefer. Because we found different results in our Dutch participants compared to participants in English-speaking countries, we think that the Dutch language or culture may also play a role in word preference. For now, we advise autism researchers to use both person-first and autism-first language.

Keywords: adults; advocacy; autism; identity-first language; person-first language; terminology.

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