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Sunday, May 11, 2025

Autism and Rural Health Care

In The Politics of Autism, I discuss the day-to-day challenges facing autistic people and their families.  Those challenges can be especially daunting for those living in rural areas.

 Zhang, E., Alduraidi, W., Snyder, M., Kaiser, E., Hunley, S., Davis, A., Nelson, E.-L., & Cheak-Zamora, N. (2025). Pilot rural–urban comparison of health care experiences among autistic adolescents and young adults. Autism, 0(0). https://doi.org/10.1177/13623613251337506.

Lay abstract

Health care can be especially challenging for young autistic people, particularly when they move from child to adult health care. Our pilot study looked at whether the health care experiences are similar or different for autistic young people living in rural areas versus urban areas. We surveyed 180 autistic people aged 14–25 years about their health care experiences, including 96 from urban areas and 84 from rural areas. The survey asked about their experiences in finding providers, getting appointments, working with providers, and how well their providers understood autism. The results showed that rural young autistic people face some unique challenges. They often had to travel farther to find providers. They were more likely to work with one provider and report that their providers did not understand autism well compared to urban young autistic people, who often could choose between different providers. Interestingly, both rural and urban participants felt similarly about how well they could talk with their providers once they started working with them. Dental care stood out as particularly challenging among different health care services—rural participants had trouble finding dentists who accepted their insurance, while urban participants were more likely to have no dental insurance at all. These findings highlight important areas for improvement. Rural communities need more autism-trained providers and better access to nearby health services. In urban areas, addressing gaps in insurance coverage is critical. Together, we should improve care for all young autistic people, no matter where they live.