Research in Learning Disabilities in the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Cambridge started in the 1990s with the creation of a senior academic post in psychiatric, linked to the local clinical services in intellectual disabilities. In 1992 the Section of Developmental Psychiatry was established at Douglas House to support research in learning disabilities and child psychiatry under the leadership of Professor Ian Goodyer. Later, the Autism Research Centre was established and the three research groups now make up the Section of Developmental Psychiatry.
With the award of The Health Foundation Chair in Learning Disabilities to Tony Holland in 2002, it was possible to establish an interdisciplinary research group in intellectual disabilities to develop further particular research themes and collaborations. Initially, the group was known as the Learning Disabilities Research Group, but later, to reflect changes in nomenclature for the people we work with and the changes in our own interests, the name changed to the Cambridge Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities Research Group (CIDDRG). At present, the main themes include:
Each of these areas of study are now supported by senior academics from psychology, psychiatry, and the social and biological sciences, with joint appointments with the Faculty of Politics, Psychology, Sociology and International Studies at the University Cambridge, and, though our partners have now moved to Cardiff University, with the Babraham Institute. Since 2008, the Adult Theme of the NIHR CLAHRC for Cambridgeshire and Peterborough has been based within the CIDDRG, facilitating research collaborations between clinicians and academics working with people with intellectual disabilities and with acquired brain injury. In addition, we are founder partners in the Centre for Participation and the Eastern Region Intellectual Disability Research Network.
Several of those engaged in research have an active involvement in local clinical services for people with intellectual disabilities, and with national and international organisations in this field. This includes, for example, voluntary organisations supporting people with specific syndromes and their families,'vulnerable' people with intellectual disabilities, and also scientific organisations such as the International Association for the Scientific Study of Intellectual Disabilities (IASSID). Tony Holland is a Vice President of IASSID. He is also Editor of the Journal of Intellectual Disability Research (JIDR), and Isabel Clare is a member of the JIDR and the Journal of Applied Research in Intellectual Disabilities Editorial Boards. Our links with local statutory, private and voluntary services include the Cambridge Parliament for People with Learning Difficulties and the Cambridge branch of the National Autistic Society.