| Literature DB >> 33023296 |
Bethany Fm Oakley1, Julian Tillmann1,2, Jumana Ahmad1,3, Daisy Crawley1, Antonia San José Cáceres1,4, Rosemary Holt5, Tony Charman1,6, Tobias Banaschewski7, Jan Buitelaar8,9, Emily Simonoff1,6, Declan Murphy1,6, Eva Loth1.
Abstract
LAY 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.Entities:
Keywords: anxiety; autism; depression; quality of life; well-being
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33023296 PMCID: PMC7874383 DOI: 10.1177/1362361320959959
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Autism ISSN: 1362-3613