Guest Blog: The Autistic Mental Health Conference 2025 is Coming Soon
We are amplifying this event to help to spread the word and strengthen our shared call for Autistic-led, justice-focused conversations and wanted you to hear directly from one of the organizers.
This blog was written for the Autistic Mental Health Conference 2025 by Helen Edgar (Autistic Realms), an event she is proud to help facilitate as part of a collective push for change in how our mental health is understood and supported.
Autistic Mental Health: Beyond the Pathology Paradigm
It’s not easy to define Autistic mental health. In a world where “mental illness” is often accepted as a pathology, something broken to be fixed, we rarely stop to ask why so many people are struggling, and especially why Autistic people are so disproportionately affected.
Mental health is often medicalised in ways that physical health is not. While we can point to a broken bone or measure blood pressure, mental distress is more elusive. Increasingly, researchers and activists are recognising that what we call “mental illness” might not be something wrong with us, but a natural response to prolonged adversity. In this view, mental health conditions are a form of neurodivergence, ways of thinking and feeling that emerge from surviving trauma and hostile environments. Our brains adapt to harm to keep us alive. These adaptations, such as hypervigilance, shutdown, dissociation, psychosis, and overwhelm are then labelled as disorders.
This matters deeply for Autistic people. We are not separate from our environments. We live in a world that often misunderstands, invalidates, and isolates us. For many of us, trauma is not the exception; it’s the norm. I have yet to meet an Autistic person who hasn’t experienced some form of trauma, even if they are perhaps not yet recognising that within themselves, whether that be sensory trauma, communication invalidation, misattunement, masking, or systemic neglect.
The impact is stark. Research suggests that as many as 8 in 10 Autistic people have a mental health condition. Sadly, Autistic people have been found to have up to an eightfold increased risk of death by suicide compared to non-Autistic people (Brown et al., 2024). For Autistic children, the risk of thinking about or attempting suicide is 28 times higher than for their non-Autistic peers. These are not just numbers; they are lives cut short by systems that fail to meet our needs.
The latest Assuring Transformation NHS Digital data (April 2025) paints an equally troubling picture:
● 2,025 Autistic people and people with a learning disability are in mental health hospitals in England. Of these, 1,455 (72%) are autistic.
● 240 under-18s are in inpatient units. Of these, 230 (96%) are autistic.
● The number of Autistic people without a learning disability detained in mental health hospitals has increased by 141% since 2015.
● In 2015, autistic people made up 38% of the total in hospital. Now it is 72% (National Autistic Society, 2025).
These statistics are not personal failings; they are systemic failures of education, healthcare, mental health services, and broader society to support Autistic people in ways that affirm our needs, identities, and ways of being.
Systemic injustice does not impact all Autistic people equally. Experiences of racism, ableism, sexism, queerphobia, transphobia, and classism often intersect, compounding barriers to care and amplifying harm. Autistic people who are multiply marginalised, such as Autistic people of colour, LGBTQ+ Autistic people, or Autistic people in povert,y are more likely to experience misdiagnosis, coercive treatment, and exclusion from community-based support. Any conversation about Autistic mental health must be grounded in intersectionality, recognising that liberation for one part of our community cannot be achieved without justice for all.
That’s why the Autistic Mental Health Conference 2025 is so important.
This groundbreaking event, run by Autistic people, for Autistic people, will take place on Saturday, August 16, 2025, both in person and online. It offers a vital space for collective reflection, learning, and action, with radical, compassionate, and affirming perspectives that challenge dominant narratives and centre lived experience.
This year’s lineup of speakers offers deeply insightful perspectives, including:
● Katie Munday – Shares the experiences of transgender and gender-diverse Autistic adults, focusing on feelings of (un)belonging.
● Tanya Adkin – Presents a thought-provoking talk based on Creating Autistic Suffering: Language, Survival, And The Work Of Change.
● Priscilla Eyles – Explores how systems of inequity can pave a pathway to cult abuse.
● Ed Shearer – Tells a powerful story of confronting systemic failures and driving neurodivergent-led change.
● Amanda Hind – Offers unique insights on a yet-to-be-announced topic.
● Nikki Smith – Highlights the transformative power of early intervention and timely diagnosis.
● David Gray-Hammond – Critically examines how psychiatric systems sustain power in the lives of Autistic people.
🎟️ Tickets & Discount: Use the code NEWSLETTER20 for 20% off tickets:
Click here to book
Autistic mental health is not just about treatment or diagnosis. It’s about understanding our lives, reclaiming our narratives, and creating a world where we can thrive, not just survive.
Join us, be part of this vital dialogue, and help pave the way toward more inclusive and equitable mental health support.
Autistic people deserve to thrive, not just survive.
References & Further Reading
Botha, M., Dibb, B., & Frost, D. M. (2022). ‘It’s being a part of a grand tradition, a grand counter-culture which involves communities’: A qualitative investigation of autistic community connectedness. Autism, 26(8), 2151–2164.https://doi.org/10.1177/13623613221080248
Brown, C. M., Newell, V., Sahin, E., Cassidy, S., Forde, C., Wigham, S., & Richards, G. (2024). Updated systematic review of suicide in autism: 2018–2024. Current Developmental Disorders Reports, 11(3), 225–256.https://doi.org/10.1007/s40474-024-00308-9
Chapman, R. (2023). Empire of normality: Neurodiversity and capitalism. Pluto Press.
Frazer-Carroll, M. (2023). Mad world: The politics of mental health. Outspoken by Pluto.
Gray-Hammond, D., & Adkin, T. (2024, November 26). Creating autistic suffering: Autistic safety and neurodivergence competency. Emergent Divergence. https://emergentdivergence.com/2023/04/11/creating-autistic-suffering-autistic-safety-and-neurodivergence-competency/
Gray-Hammond, D. (2022. The New Normal: Autistic musings on the threat of a broken society, Amazon.
Gray-Hammond, D. (2025). Unashamed Autistic: Collected Writings On The Nature Of Autism And Autistic Pride, Amazon.
Milton, D. E. (2012b). On the ontological status of autism: The ‘double empathy problem.’ Disability & Society, 27(6), 883–887. https://doi.org/10.1080/09687599.2012.710008
National Autistic Society. (2025, May 28). Number of autistic people in mental health hospitals at record high.https://www.autism.org.uk/what-we-do/news/number-of-autistic-people-in-mental-health-ho-29_
Walker, N. (2021). Neuroqueer heresies: Notes on the neurodiversity paradigm, autistic empowerment, and postnormal possibilities. Autonomous Press.