Autistic Menopause by Rachel Moseley - ISBN: 9781805010975
Paperback
Autistic menopause: Understanding changes, finding strategies, knowing you’re not alone.

Autistic Menopause

A Guide to the Menopausal Transition for Autistic People and those Supporting Them

$50.16

  • Paperback

    256 pages

  • Release Date

    20 January 2026

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Summary

Having menopausal symptoms as an autistic person can feel isolating and confusing. You might be wondering why you are feeling so lost or why your experience doesn’t seem anything like other people’s.

Here to provide you with clarity are Dr. Rachel Moseley, who is autistic herself, and Professor Julie Gamble-Turner, who has personal experience of the menopause. They combine their years of experience researching autism, health and wellbeing to bring you this indispensable book. Drawing …

Book Details

ISBN-13:9781805010975
ISBN-10:1805010972
Author:Rachel Moseley, Julie Gamble-Turner
Publisher:Jessica Kingsley Publishers
Imprint:Jessica Kingsley Publishers
Format:Paperback
Number of Pages:256
Release Date:20 January 2026
Weight:306g
Dimensions:228mm x 150mm x 22mm
What They're Saying

Critics Review

A much-needed and supportive book for autistic people, their colleagues and families, with revelatory explanations of the neurological changes around menopause - and how understanding them can be positive too. – Kate Muir, Author of ‘How to Have a Magnificent Midlife Crisis’
Groundbreaking and essential, Autistic Menopause bridges research, lived experience, and practical advice. A must-have for autistic people, their allies, and health professionals. – Dr Michelle Garnett - Clinical Psychologist - PhD (Psych), Founder and Director of Attwood & Garnett Events, AuDHD
This is THE book that autistic woman have been waiting for. Probably the most important autism book this year that will changes the lives of menopausal autistic women. – Sarah Hendrickx, author of Women and Girls on the Autistic Spectrum, 2nd edition.
A vital, compassionate guide through the messy (and often maddening!) reality of autistic peri/menopause. Validating, empowering, and long overdue - this book breaks the silence around the life-changing hormonal plot twist no one warned us about. – Steph Jones – author of The Autistic Survival Guide to Therapy, Neurodevelopmental Consultant & Diagnostician
Forget everything you’ve heard about menopause. This isn’t about hot flushes and accepting decline, it’s about your brain rewiring itself, and why that’s harder when you’re autistic. Honest, hopeful, and practical. The book that turns ‘what if this breaks me?’ into ‘okay, I can prepare for this. – Pooky Knightsmith, autistic author and speaker (not yet perimenopausal, but preparing)
This is a powerful read! I recognised my own experience on every page and appreciate the gender inclusive language. This is a very necessary and useful book. – Tania Glyde, counsellor/psychotherapist and founder of the Queer Menopause Project.

About The Author

Rachel Moseley

Dr Rachel Moseley has conducted research in autism since 2010, most notably focusing on issues around wellbeing and mental health. In 2020 and 2021, the two authors collaborated on the seminal work in the field of autism and menopause, publishing the first two academic papers in this field. Dr Moseley is a late-diagnosed autistic person herself, and is well connected to the autism community online and organisations within the UK. She has considerable consultancy experience with policy-makers and professionals in the health, social care, employment and education sectors, with regards the wellbeing of autistic people.

Professor Julie Turner-Cobb is a registered Health Psychologist with the Health and Care Professions Council (HCPC); a Chartered Psychologist and Associate Fellow of the British Psychological Society (BPS). She has over thirty years experience of conducting research on the effects of stress on health and well-being in children and adults at different stages across the lifespan. She has published extensively in the field of psychoendocrinology that examines the effect of psychological factors on hormones. Her work has focused on coping and resilience during stressful life experiences, the importance of social support, and effects on parents, relatives and caregivers. Most recently she has researched midlife stress and focused on the experience of menopause particularly in autistic people.

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