What is autism?
The National Autistic Society describes autism as a developmental disability that affects how people communicate and interact with the world. Autism is a spectrum condition that affects people in different ways. Autistic people may have:
- Challenges with social communication and interaction
- Repetitive and restrictive behaviours
- Over-sensitivity or under-sensitivity to noise, touch, smells or tastes
- Highly focused interests or hobbies
Some autistic people also have a learning disability.
Terminology
This briefing uses terminology recommended by the National Autistic Society. It uses the term “autistic people” unless quoting text from another publication.
Autism is sometimes referred to as “autism spectrum disorder”, “autistic spectrum disorder” or “autism spectrum condition”. These terms are often used in relation to medical diagnoses and data reporting. Where these terms are used in the briefing, it is to reflect the data or text source they are referring to.
The term “neurodiversity” refers to the normal range of variation in the way people's brains work, including how they perceive and respond to the world. A person whose brain works differently from the “typical” person may refer to themselves as neurodivergent; some, but not all, autistic people identify as neurodivergent.
The Autism Act 2009 and autism strategies
The Autism Act 2009 requires the Government to introduce and keep under review an adult autism strategy.
In 2021 the Government published a new strategy for 2021 to 2026 including children and young people, alongside adults, for the first time. It focuses on autism awareness, education, employment, health, reducing inpatient care, community support and the criminal justice system.
An implementation plan for 2021 to 2022 set out how the strategy would be funded in the first year. The Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) is working on updating the statutory guidance. The updated guidance will be subject to public consultation in 2024.
The strategy was previously refreshed in 2014, and the first strategy Fulfilling and rewarding lives: the strategy for adults with autism in England was published in 2010.
Health policy and autism
The NHS Long Term Plan (2019) includes objectives for improving access to autism diagnosis and post-diagnostic support, as well as improving autistic people’s mental and physical health.
The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) has said people referred for an autism assessment should be seen within three months. The median waiting time ranged between 218 and 306 days (roughly seven to 10 months) in the months from April to December 2023.
The Health and Care Act 2022 introduced a new legal requirement for all health and social care service providers registered with the Care Quality Commission to provide employees with training on autism and learning disabilities (called Oliver McGowan Training).
The Long Term Plan set a target to reduce inpatient provision for autistic people and people with a learning disability by 50% (compared with 2015 levels) and support more people in the community by 2023/24. In February 2024, 2,045 autistic people and people with a learning disability were inpatients, down 30% from 2,905 inpatients in March 2015. However the number of inpatients on the autism spectrum only (without learning disability) is actually higher in 2024 than it was in 2015.
In July 2022, the DHSC published an updated Building the right support for people with a learning disability and autistic people: action plan, focusing on six areas to develop community services and reduce reliance on inpatient mental health beds.
The Government also proposed in the Draft Mental Health Bill 2022 to amend the criteria for detention under the Mental Health Act, so a person could not be subject to long-term detention for treatment for autism or learning disability.
Social care and autism
Under the Care Act 2014, local authorities have duties relating to the provision of adult social care services, which apply to everyone including autistic adults. Guidance for social workers (PDF) is provided in a Government-commissioned Capabilities Statement. The Government is also rolling out a qualification for commissioners who work with autistic people. Guidance on identifying local demand and developing services for autistic people was published alongside the autism strategy for 2021 to 2026.
Education and autism
Under the Children and Families Act 2014, local authorities have a duty to identify needs in their area and commission services to support children and young people with special educational needs and disabilities (SEND). In January 2015, the Government published a SEND code of practice.
In March 2022, the Government published the results of a review of the SEND system’s effectiveness as a green paper for consultation. In March 2023, the Government published a SEND and alternative provision improvement plan: right support, right place, right time. The plan included intentions to establish national standards for SEND and alternative education provision and to standardise and digitise Education, Health and Care Plans.
England’s statutory SEND system does not extend to higher education. Higher education providers are instead bound by different statutory duties under the Equality Act 2010 when it comes to supporting autistic students. There is also different funding in place known as the Disabled Students' Allowance (DSA).
Employment and autism
According to the Office for National Statistics, 30.6% of disabled people with autism as a main or secondary health condition were in employment in 2022/23, compared with 53.9% for all disabled people and 81.9% of non-disabled people.
The National Autistic Society has said that 77% of unemployed autistic people want to work.
The autism strategy for 2021 to 2026 says that by 2026, the Government will have improved support to help autistic people find and stay in work. This will be through improving employer awareness of autism, improving the accessibility of employment programmes and making Jobcentres more autism inclusive.
In April 2023, the Department of Work and Pensions announced a review considering how to improve autistic people’s employment prospects. In February 2024 the Government published the report and recommendations of the Buckland Review of Autism Employment, which highlighted the barriers to autistic people entering the workplace and set out recommendations to address them.
Schemes aimed at supporting autistic people with employment include:
- the Disability Confident scheme
- the Access to Work programme
- the Intensive Personalised Employment Support programme
- the Local Supported Employment initiative
Under the Equality Act 2010, employers must make reasonable adjustments to support disabled job applicants and employees. However, the 2024 Buckland Review reported research findings that access to adjustments for autistic employees is “highly variable”.
Social security and autism
Autistic people may be entitled to a range of benefits including benefits to help with the extra costs of a disability. These might include Personal Independence Payment (PIP), which is replacing Disability Living Allowance (DLA), and ‘Income replacement’ benefits to cover day-to-day living costs, such as Universal Credit.
The Department for Work and Pensions published Transforming Support: The Health and Disability White Paper alongside the Spring Budget on 15 March 2023. This included an aim to make “the [benefit] claim journey more of a two-way conversation”, communicate decisions in a simple and compassionate way and get more decisions right first time.
The white paper outlined plans to abolish the Work Capability Assessment. This assessment helps determine whether someone is entitled to extra amounts in Universal Credit and Employment and Support Allowance, as well as any work-related requirements people must meet as a condition of their claim.
Under these plans a new health element of Universal Credit will be available to claimants who also receive PIP, replacing the existing extra amount for those assessed as having ‘limited capability for work and work-related activity’.
The criminal justice system and autism
The autism strategy for 2021 to 2026 says autistic people may be over-represented among people who come into contact with the criminal and youth justice systems, as victims, witnesses or defendants. It references evidence that autistic people often have poor experiences of these systems and can find prison environments overwhelming, and that staff do not always understand their needs.
The strategy commits to developing a better view of existing provision for neurodivergent adults, including autistic adults, through a call for evidence on neurodiversity in the criminal justice system.
Neurodiversity in the criminal justice system: A review of evidence was published in July 2021. The review found too little is being done to understand and meet the needs of neurodivergent people in the system.
The Ministry of Justice responded by publishing a neurodiversity action plan in June 2022, which was updated in January 2023. The updated plan says neurodiversity support managers have been introduced in prisons and the Government plans to have one in every prison across England and Wales by 2024. It also notes autism accreditation is being promoted across the prison estate.
Devolved executives
This paper focuses on policies in England, the Autism Strategy 2021-26 applies only to England. Many of the policy areas are devolved, for example health and education. Each of the devolved executives is responsible for developing its own policy. Section 8, of this briefing, provides an overview of autism strategies implemented in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.