(Isabelle Wightman, 5/12/2026)
ust behind the city’s firehouse, an unassuming Victorian building holds a doctor’s office that reimagines what healthcare can look like for neurodivergent people.
All Brains Belong, a nonprofit that offers primary care for 450 patients, has a clinical model based around social connection and mutual aid. The practice is specifically tailored to people who are neurodivergent, a catchall term covering conditions such as autism and dyslexia where people process information differently than most.
While the practice is currently closed to new patients, All Brains Belong also offers educational material and support for the public, including the weekly virtual Brain Club meeting, employer trainings and, coming out this fall, the clinic founder’s first published book.
Guiding all of these programs is the nonprofit’s mission to provide an alternative to the standard “one-size-fits-all” healthcare system that doesn’t always work for neurodivergent people.


