The National Autistic Society NI has launched a new campaign, Forgotten Voices, and is calling on the First and Deputy First Minister of Northern Ireland to provide immediate access to short breaks ...
Our charity has launched a new award to help organisations create more inclusive, understanding and supportive workplaces for ...
Find out more about this lifelong developmental disability that affects more than one in 100 people.
Too Much Information (TMI) was our campaign to increase public understanding of the five core features of autism and to give people an understanding of what actions they can take to help autistic ...
We are delighted that Helen Allison School has achieved the Beacon Award for exceptional work in sharing their knowledge and understanding of autism good practice, to educate, guide and inspire others ...
More women and girls than ever before are discovering that they are autistic. Many had been missed or misdiagnosed due to outdated stereotypes about autism. But that is slowly changing. In the past, ...
All employees deserve to feel at ease within their work place and feel that their ability to apply for job roles will be met with autism friendly adjustments and processes. Offering an autism ...
Luke's talk will reflect on why so many autistic individuals are so anxious so much of the time, sometimes leading to long-term trauma. He believes that these levels of anxiety are related to the ...
Loren Snow is an autistic autism consultant with over ten years’ experience teaching people to understand autism. They have delivered training to tens of thousands of parents of autistic children, ...
ADHD is one of the most common co-occurring conditions of autism. Since 2013, when the diagnostic criteria changed in the Diagnostic Statistical Manual (DSM-5), it became possible for people to be ...
Dr Naomi Fisher is a clinical psychologist and eye movement desensitisation and reprocessing (EMDR) trainer. She specialises in trauma, autism and alternative approaches to education. She works in ...
After seeing nothing but the negative when Googling his condition, James Ward-Sinclair set out to redefine how autism is viewed on and off the web. Normally found researching, writing or relaxing with ...