Author:
Brouwers Evelien P. M.,Bergijk Michel,van Weeghel Jaap,Detaille Sarah,Kerkhof Hanneke,Dewinter Jeroen
Abstract
Abstract
Purpose
The aim of the study was to gain more insight into barriers to and facilitators for finding and keeping competitive employment for autistic adults. Research questions were: (1) What barriers and facilitators do autistic adults report in finding and keeping competitive employment?; and (2) What are differences and similarities between autistic adults with and without paid employment regarding barriers and facilitators for sustainable employment?
Methods
Eight focus groups were conducted (N = 64 autistic adults). Four groups included only participants without paid employment (N = 24), and four groups consisted exclusively of participants with current paid employment (including part-time, N = 40). All discussions were audiotaped and transcribed verbatim to enable inductive thematic content analysis. Data were analyzed using ATLAS.ti 9.
Results
Ten themes and thirty-four subthemes were found. Many were interconnected. Themes facilitating sustainable employment included a positive workplace atmosphere, a supportive supervisor, being able to do work that aligns with interests and talents, favorable physical working conditions, coaching, higher self-insight, higher self-esteem, and proactivity. Most themes and subthemes emerged from both groups. Differences between the groups were that those with paid employment seemed to have experienced more friendly workplaces and supervisors, had received better coaching in finding and keeping employment, had higher self-insight and higher self-esteem, were more assertive and proactive.
Conclusions
As many (sub-)themes were interrelated, the results suggest that to improve work participation, particularly two key areas are promising: (1) to realize more friendly, well-being oriented and inclusive workplaces, and (2) to increase autistic adults’ self-insight into personal needs for positive wellbeing and self-knowledge regarding talents, wishes and well-being boundaries.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference36 articles.
1. Nederlands Autisme Register. Netherlands Autism Register (NAR) in numbers. Vereniging voor Autisme en Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam. 2022. https://nederlandsautismeregister.nl/publicaties/nar-in-cijfers.html. Accessed 16 Nov 2022.
2. CBS. Workers. Statistics Netherlands. 2022. https://www.cbs.nl/nl-nl/visualisaties/dashboard-arbeidsmarkt/werkende. Accessed 16 Nov 2022.
3. Census. Outcomes for disabled people in the UK: 2021. Office for National Statistics. 2021. https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/healthandsocialcare/disability/articles/outcomesfordisabledpeopleintheuk/2021#employment. Accessed 16 Nov 2022.
4. Goldfarb Y, Golan O, Gal E. A self-determination theory approach to work motivation of autistic adults: a qualitative exploratory study. J Autism Dev Disord. 2023;53(4):1529–1542.
5. Taylor JL, Henninger NA, Mailick MR. Longitudinal patterns of employment and postsecondary education for adults with autism and average-range IQ. Autism. 2015;19(7):785–793.