NYSCP Working with Autistic Parents - National Gudiance - North Yorkshire

Worried about a child?
Make a Referral

Click here

Working with Autistic Parents – National Gudiance

Working with Autistic Parents – National Guidance.

A new document produced by Research in Practice is now available on the NYSCP, procedures, practice guidance and one-minute guides page.

This frontline briefing is intended for child and family social care practitioners and other professionals, such as occupational therapists, who work directly with Autistic parents or carers and their families. Additionally, it serves as a valuable resource for senior managers, aiding decision-making and enhancing practices that support their social care workforce.


This briefing introduces autism as it relates to practice with Autistic parents. It explores the
necessity and responsibility for all social care practitioners to work relationally and inclusively
with Autistic parents and their families. This briefing outlines a neuroinclusive approach to
practice rooted in the values of the neurodiversity paradigm and social justice models.

Key Points

  • Autism is a lifelong neurodevelopmental difference affecting communication, sensory processing, and behaviour. It is not a uniform experience; each autistic person has unique strengths and challenges.
  • Identity-first language is preferred (“Autistic parent” rather than “parent with autism”), respecting autistic identity.
  • Practitioners’ knowledge of autism is limited. There is little focus on autistic parents in social work education and minimal integration of autistic perspectives.
  • Strengths in autistic parenting include deep empathy, commitment to understanding children’s needs, preference for routine, and strong motivation to research and support their children.
  • Challenges for autistic parents can include sensory sensitivities, communication differences, managing energy demands, masking (hiding autistic traits), burnout, stigma, and trauma—often exacerbated by misunderstanding and deficit-focused services.
  • Conceptual frameworks such as the neurodiversity paradigm, double empathy problem, and diversity in social intelligence help practitioners support autistic parents more effectively.
  • Intersectionality matters: Autistic parents may face compounded disadvantage due to gender, race, socioeconomic status, and co-occurring conditions. Support must be holistic and culturally sensitive.
  • Systemic issues: Autistic parents are at higher risk of being wrongly accused of neglect or harm, facing parental blame, and experiencing trauma from social care interventions.
  • Recommendations: Practitioners should adopt strengths-based, person-centred, and neuroinclusive approaches, challenge stereotypes, and make reasonable adjustments to support autistic parents and their families.

The full document can be accessed here: NYSCP

Image

Resource Library

Find the latest forms, guidance, tools and documents to help you safeguard children in North Yorkshire by searching in our resource library

More

Our latest news

12 Jun 2026

New Free Training Opportunities for Professionals Working with Young People

New Free Training Opportunities for Professionals Working with Young People We’re pleased to share an exciting programme of free, interactive...

Read More
04 Jun 2026

York and North Yorkshire Youth Commission – Have Your Say on Inclusivity and Discrimination

York and North Yorkshire Youth Commission – Have Your Say on Inclusivity and Discrimination The York and North Yorkshire Youth...

Read More
03 Jun 2026

Child Death Review Training

The North Yorkshire Safeguarding Children Partnership (NYSCP) is pleased to offer essential Child Death Review (CDR) Training for professionals involved in safeguarding...

Read More
03 Jun 2026

DSL Network Event – Tuesday 16th June

DSL Network Event – Tuesday 16th June 09:30 – 11:30 (online) The NYSCP school’s DSL network session is a termly...

Read More
MoreView all our news