Anxiety: autistic children and teenagers (2024)

About anxiety in autistic children and teenagers

Autistic children feel many of the same worries and fears as typically developing children.

But autistic children might also worry or feel stressed about things that are less worrying for typically developing children. These include things like:

  • small disruptions to their routines or new sensations they feel in their bodies
  • unfamiliar or unpredictable social situations
  • situations where it’s hard to know what other people are thinking or feeling
  • their own thoughts and feelings, especially when these cause unfamiliar or unpleasant physical symptoms
  • lack of access to their special interest.

When autistic children and teenagers learn practical skills to reduce their anxiety, it can have a positive effect on their daily lives.

Signs of anxiety in autistic children and teenagers

When autistic children get worried or anxious, the way they show their anxiety can look a lot like common characteristics of autism – stimming, special interests and resistance to changes in routine.

Also, because autistic children have difficulty recognising their own anxious thoughts and feelings, they can’t always tell you that they’re feeling anxious.Instead, you might notice an increase in challenging behaviour.

For example, your anxious child might:

  • have more trouble sleeping
  • have meltdowns or emotional outbursts
  • avoid or withdraw from social situations
  • do things to hurt themselves, like head-banging, scratching skin or hand-biting.

Anxiety is a natural part of life and something that everyone experiences at some stage. But there are things you can do to ease your child’s worries and encourage your child to manage their own anxiety levels.

Anxiety triggers: how to identify them in autistic children and teenagers

Finding out what makes your autistic child anxious is a first step in reducing your child’s anxiety and helping them to manage it.

Because autistic children and teenagers can have difficulty with understanding and managing emotions, you might need to read your child’s signals and work out what makes your child feel anxious or stressed.

Some of the common triggers for anxiety in autistic children include:

  • changes in routine – for example, not going to a weekly piano lesson because the teacher is sick
  • changes in environment – for example, a new house, new play equipment at the local park, or furniture in different places at home
  • unfamiliar social situations – for example, a birthday party at an unfamiliar house
  • sensory sensitivities – for example, sensitivities to particular noises, bright lights, specific flavours or food textures
  • fear of a particular situation, activity or object – for example, sleeping in their own bed, going to the toilet, balloons or vacuum cleaners
  • times of transition – for example, a new school year, the start of secondary school or the start of puberty.

Once you’ve worked out the things that make your child feel anxious, you can figure out the best way to help your child manage their anxiety in these situations. This might include:

  • helping your child learn to recognise what anxiety feels like
  • encouraging your child to use relaxation and calming strategies
  • creating visual tools to help your child through anxious situations
  • giving your child opportunities to practise handling anxious situations.

It also helps if other people who look after your child – for example, child care workers, teachers and family members– also know what makes your child feel anxious and how they can help your child with managing anxiety in these situations.

You might be able to help with your child’s anxiety by sticking to routines and keeping your child’s environment as predictable as possible. Try to minimise changes to routine and prepare your child for them if you can. You can also work on helping your child learn to handle changes to routines.

Ways to help autistic children and teenagers recognise anxiety

Your autistic child might need to learn what anxiety feels like in their body. For example, when your child feels anxious, their:

  • palms get sweaty
  • stomach feels strange
  • heart beats faster
  • hands flap.

You could try drawing an outline of a person’s body. Inside the outline, help your child draw or write what happens in each part of their body when they feel scared or worried.

Relaxation and calming strategies for when autistic children and teenagers feel anxious

You can help your child learn ways to calm down when they start feeling anxious or stressed. These might include:

  • counting slowly to 10
  • taking 5 deep breaths
  • running around the yard 5 times
  • doing 50 jumps on the trampoline
  • looking at a collection of their favourite or special things
  • reading a favourite book
  • closing their eyes for a few moments
  • going to a quiet part of the house.

Get your child to practise these strategies when they’re calm. Once your child knows the strategies well, you can gently guide your child to try them when they feel anxious.

Visual tools to help autistic children and teenagers prepare for anxious situations

If visual supports and social stories work well for your child, you could use these tools to help your child prepare for situations that make them anxious.

For example, if your child gets anxious when you drop them off at school, you could take some photos of what your child will be doing – walking in the school gate, sitting in the classroom, playing sport, eating lunch and so on. You could also take photos of what you’ll be doing while you’re not together, like driving home, grocery shopping, gardening and so on. A clear picture of you coming back to pick your child up would be important too.

If your child gets anxious when there’s a change in routine, daily or weekly visual schedules can help prepare your child. When you know a change is coming up – for example, no swimming lessons in the school holidays – you can show this on your schedule. Leading up to the change, look at the schedule regularly with your child so that your child knows the weekly routine will be different.

Some children like to be warned about a change or an event a day in advance. Some like to know a week in advance. But for some, too much warning can mean they worry until the event happens.

Opportunities to practise handling anxious situations

If you give your child opportunities to practise for situations that trigger their anxiety, it can help your child understand these situations and feel more prepared for them.

For example, if going to the hairdresser makes your child feel anxious, you could try taking your child for a practice run. You could ask the hairdresser if you could come at a time of day when it’s quiet and calm, then go through the steps with your child. Or perhaps your child could watch someone else get their hair cut.

If your child gets anxious in social situations, you could practise these together. You could practise different situations and take turns playing different roles. Try to keep the scenarios short and simple, and encourage and praise your child.

Getting help with managing anxiety in autistic children and teenagers

A psychologist might be able to help if your child is very anxious. A psychologist can work directly with your child and family to develop strategies for reducing anxiety.

Psychologists use a range of approaches:

  • Cognitive behaviour therapy – this helps children develop skills to change their thinking in situations that make them anxious.
  • Therapies and supports that use gradual exposure to help children face their fears – this might include the stepladder approach.
  • Social stories – these can prepare children for unfamiliar or stressful situations that generally make them anxious.
  • Relaxation training – this can help your child learn to relax.

Mental health occupational therapists are another option to help your child with managing anxiety.

You can ask your GP or paediatrician to recommend a psychologist or therapist.

Medicine can also reduce anxiety symptoms in autistic children. It’s usually recommended only when anxiety is affecting a child’s everyday life and other strategies haven’t reduced the anxiety enough. You can speak to your GP orpaediatrician about this option.

Anxiety: autistic children and teenagers (2024)
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