Parents struggling to cope with their autistic children are not being properly supported by government. Is this true for your family?

Autistic children

Autistic children

 

Parents struggling to cope with their autistic children are not being properly supported by local authorities, the National Autistic Society has told us.

BBC’s Victoria Derbyshire programme’s reporter Noel Phillips has been to meet families affected.

The Local Government Association says while “councils are working hard to make sure children with autism and other special needs get access to the support they need… they have been put in an impossible situation due to increasing demand and historic underfunding”.

 

Autism and Toilet Training – some great tips

 

 

Toilet training your child on the autism spectrum

Toilet training your child on the autism spectrum

This is a really tough one for a lot of autism families.

So any advice is pretty useful. Have a look here.

Anyhow we can across this excellent video which we think you will find of use in your autism and toilet training journey!

 

 

Dear Katie Hopkins. Please stop making life harder for disabled people Lucy Hawking – daughter of Stephen Hawking

Stephen Hawking

Stephen Hawking

My father is Stephen Hawking, and I have an autistic son. So it makes me sad when your ‘jokes’ about Ed Miliband mock people with disabilities
Dear Katie Hopkins, I am writing to you – not respectfully, but politely – to ask you to stop.

I read your comments about Ed Miliband and his supposed resemblance to someone “on the spectrum” just as I got home from a trip to Australia. I was there as one of the presenters of a show which featured my father, Stephen Hawking (I’m going to assume you know who he is) as a live hologram beamed into Sydney Opera House.

In my introduction to him, I said that I hoped attitudes to disability had changed since I was a child in the 1970s when having a disabled father was a rarity. We were openly and intrusively commented on when we went out together. We had many difficult moments, such as the time a restaurant manager asked us to leave while we were in the middle of lunch because we were putting the other diners off their food. In fact, it was like growing up with a whole world of people like you, everywhere, all the time.

 

 

 

The point of my story at the talk in Sydney was that I hoped that now, no disabled person would encounter this kind of behaviour – and that they would be treated with respect and dignity. It’s on YouTube; you can watch it and see how the audience responds.

Read the full article here