This research study is called ‘Learning about the lives of adults on the autism spectrum and their relatives/carers’. Our aim is for our research to lead to new knowledge about people’s lives, and change to services and support for adults on the autism spectrum and their relatives.
Research about the autism spectrum often requires large numbers of participants. For this reason we want to recruit as many adults on the autism spectrum as possible from across the UK to join our research - a cohort of adults on the autism spectrum. A cohort means a group of people with shared characteristics – in this case an autism spectrum diagnosis.
If you agree to consent for an adult who cannot give consent, as well as contacting you now, we would like to contact you at different times in the future, to make sure we have up-to-date information about the adult you are consenting for. We hope that the project will continue for at least 10 years. However, you would be free to opt out at any time.
You may have a relative/friend/person you care for with an autism spectrum condition who is unable to decide for themselves about whether to take part in this research study.
We are therefore asking you as their nearest relative, welfare attorney or guardian if you will give consent on their behalf to take part in this study. This is permissible under the Adults with Incapacity (Scotland) Act 2000. Only the nearest relative, welfare attorney or guardian can consent. You will of course have your own opinions about this research. However, we are asking you to consider their best interests and what you believe would be their wishes.
If you give your agreement, we will ask you to read and sign the Consent Form. We will keep you informed about the research so you can let us know if you have any concerns. In the future, you can request that your relative/friend/person you care for, is withdrawn from the study at any time, without giving a reason and without their health or other care being affected. If you cannot give your consent for the research, it will not affect in anyway the standard of care your relative/friend/person you care for receives.
Please contact us if you have any questions. Thank you
This study will increase our knowledge about what life is like for adults on the autism spectrum – we will use the results to let people know how adults might want to be supported, and hope this will lead to people making changes in the services available to adults on the autism spectrum.
By taking part, you will help us with research that might lead to improvements in services and support for people from the autism community. The research team includes adults on the autism spectrum, parents/carers and professionals. When we designed this study, we spoke to adults on the spectrum and relatives to make sure we are collecting the information needed to better understand peoples’ everyday lives.
We want to include adults on the autism spectrum of all abilities. You are being asked to consent for an adult on the autism spectrum who is unable to give consent to take part in research. This means you will answer questions on their behalf, as if you were them.We want to include adults aged 16 or over, with a diagnosis of:
You may have found out about this research in different ways. You may have looked at this website. Alternatively, health, education, and social care professionals and people from voluntary organisations/community groups have agreed to let adults on the autism spectrum and their relatives/carers know about this research study.
In the future, researchers might want to contact adults on the autism spectrum about other research. Our Research Steering Committee, which includes adults on the autism spectrum, will decide which projects to support, to ensure the studies are of high quality and useful. We will contact you with information about the studies – we won’t give other people your details. Then if you are interested, you can reply directly to the researchers.
You can take part in the cohort part of the research without being contacted by us about other projects in the future.
There are two ways you can join this research study.
If you prefer to join online: Please click on ‘Register with the Adult Autism Spectrum Cohort - UK’. You will be asked to give a small amount of information about yourself and the adult who you will represent. You will then be emailed your unique password. Once you have entered your email address and the password, you will be able to read information about the study, give your consent and fill in the online questionnaires. . We know people take different amounts of time to complete forms – we have designed the forms so you can start them and if you wish, save your information and return later to complete them. This information will help us find out about the experiences of adults with autism (including any sources of support, employment opportunities, types of accommodation, and other aspects of everyday activities).
Alternatively, if you would like paper version of the consent form and questionnaires to post back please contact us.
If you have questions for us or concerns about the research, you can contact us and will be happy to discuss the project with you.
No. It is up to you to decide whether or not to join the study. The services the adult you are representing may access now or in the future will not be affected in any way by your decision
What happens if I decide not to take part?
If you do not want to be contacted again by us, please let us know by contacting the address at the end of the document. To find out whether the adults who take part in this research study are representative of all adults on the autism spectrum across the UK, it helps us to have some information about people who don’t take part.
For people who don’t take part, we would like to keep a small amount of anonymous information which you, a professional or someone who has discussed this research with you, could provide. You will be asked to provide the following information about the adult you are consenting for: their year of birth, gender, ethnicity, autism spectrum diagnosis and postcode. We ask for their postcode so we can know what type of area in the UK they live in. Once we have recorded this information, the last 3 digits of the postcode will be removed by us, so all the information provided is anonymous. If you do not wish to be contacted by us, but are happy to provide us with this information, please complete the reverse side of the contact form and return it to us in the stamped addressed envelope. You do not have to do this, but it helps a lot – thank you.
You will be asked to complete a consent form on behalf of the adult who is not able to consent for themselves. You will also be asked to complete some questionnaires to give us information about their autism spectrum diagnosis, health, living arrangements, level of support needed, access to support, employment, social relationships and lifestyle choices. We would like you to complete as much of the questionnaires as possible – but you can leave questions blank, if you prefer.
We would like your permission to get copies of medical or clinical reports about their diagnosis from the team who made the autism diagnosis. If you do not want to do this, you can still take part in the cohort project – to tell us this, leave box number 5 on the consent form blank. When we get reports, we will only look at information that is relevant to this autism study and not about anything else. All information we get will be kept securely in a locked cabinet separately from the anonymised research data – we will not give any identifying information on these reports to anyone.
The information you provide on behalf of the adult lacking capacity will be kept safe according to the Data Protection Act 1998. Personal information will be kept separate from the anonymous research data. The research team will store this personal information on a secure database at Newcastle University. The database will only be accessed by research staff working on the study and individuals from the relevant agencies or the Northumberland Tyne and Wear NHS Foundation Trust, to check the quality of the research. No personal information will ever be released to researchers or anyone else. Any information that is published will always be anonymised.
If at any stage you wish to withdraw from this research study, we will remove all identifiable information about the adult you are consenting for. In that case, we will retain information on their year of birth, gender, diagnosis and postcode (see section ‘Do I have to take part?).
We will contact you from time to time to ask you to update information about the adult’s life, and to answer questionnaires. We may contact you to ask if we can visit you for certain parts of the research - in this case if you do not want a visit, or would like to have someone with you, you could say so. You will be kept informed about the study’s progress, and interesting findings, through newsletters and this website.
This study is being run by the autism research team at Newcastle University, working with groups from across the UK. The team includes experienced autism researchers, and researchers who are experts in adulthood and ageing, as well as adults on the autism spectrum and their relatives. For a list of the people involved click here. The study is funded by the UK charity Autistica. Autistica aims to fund research that will lead to improved understanding and better outcomes for people with autism across the lifespan.
This research has been looked at by independent committee of people, as part of the National Research Ethics Standards (NRES) procedures. This process has been designed to protect your interests and ensure all research is of a high standard.
This study has been reviewed and given a favourable ethical opinion by Wales Research Ethic Committee 5 14/WA/1066 for England, Wales and Northern Ireland and Scotland Research Ethics Committee A 14/SS/1079 for Scotland.
If you prefer, you can read an Easy Read version of the information sheet for adults on the autism spectrum. Please note: This information sheet is directed at adults on the autism spectrum.
Easy Read Information
If you prefer, you can read of the information on this page here:
Information