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How do core autism traits and associated symptoms relate to quality of life? Findings from the Longitudinal European Autism Project.

Published version
Peer-reviewed

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Authors

Tillmann, Julian 
Ahmad, Jumana 
Crawley, Daisy 
San José Cáceres, Antonia 

Abstract

Previous studies suggest that some autistic individuals report lower satisfaction, or well-being, with different aspects of everyday life than those without autism. It is unclear whether this might be partly explained by symptoms of anxiety and/or depression, which affect at least 20%-50% of autistic people. In this study, we measured individual differences in well-being in 573 six to thirty-year-olds with and without a diagnosis of autism. We investigated whether individual differences in well-being were explained by autism traits (e.g. social-communication difficulties) and/or anxiety and depression symptoms. We showed that, though well-being was lower for some autistic individuals, compared to those without autism, many autistic individuals reported good well-being. Where well-being was reduced, this was particularly explained by depression symptoms, across all ages. For children/adolescents, anxiety and social-communication difficulties were also related to some aspects of well-being. Our study suggests that support and services for improving mental health, especially depression symptoms, may also improve broader outcomes for autistic people.

Description

Keywords

anxiety, autism, depression, quality of life, well-being, Adolescent, Anxiety Disorders, Autism Spectrum Disorder, Autistic Disorder, Child, Humans, Personal Satisfaction, Quality of Life

Journal Title

Autism

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1362-3613
1461-7005

Volume Title

25

Publisher

SAGE Publications
Sponsorship
Innovative Medicines Initiative (115300 / 777394)