- The Autism Strategy aims to tackle the inequalities and
barriers autistic people face so they can live independent
and fulfilled lives
- Faster diagnoses and better access to health and social
care for autistic people of all ages
- Commitments will support better education tailored to
the needs of autistic children and young people
Improving the lives of autistic people is the focus of a
new multi-million pound strategy launched by the government
today.
Backed by nearly £75 million in the first year, it aims to
speed up diagnosis and improve support and care for
autistic people. The funding includes £40 million through
the NHS Long Term Plan to improve capacity in crisis
services and support children with complex needs in
inpatient care.
Autistic people face multiple disadvantages throughout
their lives, with too many struggling to get support that
is tailored to their needs at an early enough stage and
facing stigma and misunderstanding, often leaving them
lonely or isolated. Through this new strategy, steps will
be taken to improve diagnosis, which is crucial to help
people get the support they need, and improve society’s
understanding of autism.
The five year strategy was developed following engagement
with autistic people, their family and carers. It will
support autistic children and adults through better access
to education, more help to get into work, preventing
avoidable admissions to healthcare settings, and training
for prison staff to better support prisoners with complex
needs.
Health and Social Care Secretary, said:
Improving the lives of autistic people is a priority and
this new strategy, backed by almost £75 million in the
first year, will help us create a society that truly
understands and includes autistic people in all aspects
of life. It will reduce diagnosis waiting times for
children and adults and improve community support for
autistic people. This is crucial in reducing the health
inequalities they face, and the unacceptable life
expectancy gap that exists today.
Minister for Care, said:
Far too many autistic people still struggle to get the
support they need in childhood, and as adults – and this
is often exacerbated by not getting a timely diagnosis.
This landmark strategy will help give autistic people
equal opportunities to flourish in their communities as
well as better access to the support they need throughout
their lives.
Minister for Children and Families, said:
Many people who have autism face unacceptable barriers in
every aspect of their lives – in health, employment and
still too often in their education. I’m proud that the
new Autism Strategy will, for the first time ever, also
consider how to better support autistic children and
young people’s access to education.
A huge part of how we can address the inequalities that
these children and young people face is by increasing our
awareness and understanding of their needs, and tailoring
the support available to them. Working closely with the
healthcare services, we can level up outcomes for
autistic young people in generations to come.
There are approximately 700,000 autistic people in the UK
and a large number experience health inequalities during
their lives.
The life expectancy gap for autistic people is
approximately 16 years on average compared to the general
population and almost 80% of autistic adults experience
mental health problems during their lifetime.
The COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated challenges many
autistic people already face, such as loneliness and social
isolation, and anxiety.
This new strategy has been developed with the views and
experiences of autistic people provided in response to the
government’s call for evidence in 2019. The strategy will
run until 2026 and aims to:
- Improve understanding and acceptance of autism within
society: Developing and testing an initiative to improve
the public’s understanding of autistic people.– both the
strengths and positives as well as the challenges, working
with autistic people, their families and the voluntary
sector. This will help people recognise the diversity of
the autistic community; that every autistic person is
different. It includes improving understanding of the
strengths and positives of being autistic, as well as the
challenges people might face in their daily lives and how
distressed behaviour can manifest itself.
- Strengthen access to education and support positive
transitions into adulthood: Testing and expanding a
school-based identification programme based on a pilot in
Bradford from 10 to over 100 schools over the next three
years. Early findings from the pilot show children are
being identified earlier and getting support quicker.
- Support more autistic people into employment: Improving
the accessibility of job centres for autistic people, to
get them the right help to find jobs or employment
programmes.
- Tackle health and care inequalities: Providing £13
million of funding to reduce diagnosis waiting times and
increase availability of post-diagnostic support for
children and adults, and address backlogs of people waiting
made worse by the COVID-19 pandemic.
- Build the right support in the community and supporting
people in inpatient care: Providing £40 million as part of
the NHS Long Term Plan to improve community support and
prevent avoidable admissions of autistic people and those
with a learning disability, and £18.5 million to prevent
crises and improve the quality of inpatient mental health
settings.
- Improve support within the criminal and youth justice
systems: Reviewing findings from the Call for Evidence on
neurodiversity, and developing a toolkit to educate
frontline staff about this, and the additional support
people might need
Early identification can play an important role in enabling
children and young people to get timely support, which is
crucial in preventing escalation of needs.
While autism is not a learning disability, around 4 in 10
autistic people have a learning disability.
Some autistic people will need very little or no support in
their everyday lives while others may need high levels of
care, such as 24-hour support in residential care.
Caroline Stevens, Chief Executive of the National Autistic
Society said:
We and our supporters have long campaigned for a
fully-funded public understanding campaign, significant
investment in reducing diagnosis waiting times and better
post-diagnostic support. No-one should feel judged for
being autistic, or to have to wait many months for a
potentially life changing diagnosis and vital help and
support.
We’re really pleased to see concrete actions to tackle
this in the first year of the new strategy, alongside
other important commitments. The following four years
will be just as vital. It’s crucial that the Government
invest in autistic people, and finally create a society
that really works for autistic children, adults and their
families.
Nellie Allsop, autistic woman and campaigner said:
I’m extremely happy to see the launch of the strategy.
Having been diagnosed last year, age 25, I’m still yet to
tell people close to me that I’m autistic, for worry that
they won’t quite ‘get it’. That’s why I’m delighted to
hear that this strategy aims to improve the understanding
and acceptance of autism amongst the general public.
I’m also pleased it will include plans to build the right
mental health support in the community for autistic
people. As someone who avoided a hospital admission
thanks to the work of an NHS crisis team, I’ve
experienced first-hand the benefits of good mental health
support in the community. Nevertheless, more does need to
be done to improve community support and understanding of
autism within all community mental health teams -
something I hope this strategy will address.
This strategy will align with wider government work through
the National Disability Strategy and the Special
Educational Needs and Disability (SEND) review. The
government will ensure issues relevant to autistic people
are considered as part of these programmes of work.
This strategy’s accompanying implementation plan will lay
the foundations in the first year, for what the government
aims to achieve over the course of the next five years. It
will be refreshed in subsequent years, in line with future
Spending Reviews.
- £74.88 million will be given as part of the first year
of the strategy. This includes:
- £40 million through NHS Long Term Plan
- Investing £25 million into building the capacity and
capability of seven-day specialist multidisciplinary and
crisis services supporting autistic people and those with a
learning disability
- Investing £15 million in keyworker pilots and early
adopter sites to support children with the most complex
needs in inpatient mental health settings, as well as those
at risk of being admitted to these settings.
- This is in addition to the £2.5 million from the Long
Term Plan for CYP autism diagnosis.
- £31 million through Mental Health recovery action plan
to tackle inequalities and build the right support in the
community
- £600,000 to fund training for staff in early years
settings, schools and colleges, to improve the experience
of autistic children in the education system and prepare
them for adulthood.
- £600,000 for the extension of the early identification
programme developed in Bradford
- £180,000 for the understanding autism campaign