Back to Search Start Over

'Most people have no idea what autism is': Unpacking autism disclosure using social media analysis.

Authors :
Edwards, Chris
Love, Abigail M A
Jones, Sandra C
Cai, Ru Ying
Nguyen, Boyd Thai Hoang
Gibbs, Vicki
Source :
Autism: The International Journal of Research & Practice; May2024, Vol. 28 Issue 5, p1107-1119, 13p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Autism disclosure can be a complicated decision that autistic people experience. Positive outcomes can include feelings of acceptance and support, but negative outcomes can include stigma and discrimination. Although a surge in research on this topic has led to more understanding around autism disclosure, the methodologies used may have limited who was contributing to the conversation and data. To overcome this, we analyzed 3 years (2020−2022) of social media data (Reddit and Twitter) as this was public information that did not rely on researcher data collection. Reflexive thematic analysis of 3121 posts led to the generation of four themes: People do not understand autism (with experiences related to employment, dating, healthcare and mental health), autistic people just want privacy and respect, autistic people can lead us forward and non-autistic people need to assume more responsibility. We discuss how autistic adults experience the impact of society's lack of understanding of autism on a daily basis whether they disclose or not, and that it is everybody's responsibility to challenge negative stereotypes and promote a more inclusive society. Autism disclosure – that is sharing their autism diagnosis or identity with a person or people – is a difficult decision for many autistic people. While telling people they are autistic can be positive and helpful, it can also create a lot of problems. What we have learnt is that disclosure is really complicated. Rather than asking research participants questions about what might happen, we looked at what people were saying on public social media posts (Reddit and Twitter) about what did happen. We used three years of posts that were related to autism disclosure from a wide range of adults (autistic and non-autistic). Four main ideas were created from our data, with the key finding being that society does not understand autism. This lack of understanding creates problems for autistic people in work, dating, healthcare and mental health. The remaining ideas were that autistic people should have privacy and be treated with respect, that autistic representation can help society and that non-autistic people need to do more to help autistic people. Our findings support that society needs to do more through autism advocacy, better media representation and more public role models. Increasing the accuracy of understanding of autism across society will mean that autistic people can feel safer to disclose if they want to. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13623613
Volume :
28
Issue :
5
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Autism: The International Journal of Research & Practice
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
177036769
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/13623613231192133