Recent national policy and guidance promises to transform the lives of people living with autism and autistic spectrum disorders. Think Autism (2014), the refreshed National Autism Strategy, set out 15 priority action areas including social inclusion, involvement, equality, safety, local strategic needs assessments and getting the right help at the right time. Statutory guidance for its implementation was published in March 2015.
The Care Act (2014) also has the potential to transform autism services, particularly with its focus on prevention and health and social care partnership working. Furthermore, The No voice unheard, No right ignored (2015) paper is progressing the debate about how to ensure people with learning disabilities and autism can live independently and inclusively in their own communities, with more choice and control over decisions affecting their care and treatment.
The direction of travel is away from a service-based approach to commissioning and provision, towards a social inclusion, rights-based approach putting the person with autism at the centre of their own lives and contributing to their own and others’ wellbeing.
Whilst health and social care stakeholders welcome this radical shift, it presents enormous challenges. The latest self-assessment exercise revealed:
How NDTI can help
NDTi has substantial experience and a proven track record of specialist experience in independent strategic review, research, policy development, evaluation and change support. We work alongside stakeholders including people who use services to deliver real, long term improvements for people with learning disabilities, autism and mental health problems of all ages. Our team is highly experienced and brings with it, a wealth of policy, evaluation, facilitation and research knowledge and skills.
Click here to find out more about our approach and examples of our work.
Bath (Registered Office)
National Development Team for Inclusion
4 Queen Street
Bath
BA1 1HE
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