April 2nd marks World Autism Awareness Day 2026. This year’s United Nations theme — “Autism and Humanity: Every Life Has Value” — is a welcome step beyond awareness toward something more meaningful: acceptance, recognition, and a genuine willingness to meet autistic people where they are.
A Year of Progress
It’s been a busy twelve months at Oxford Brain & Mind. Over the past year we’ve expanded our neurodevelopmental assessment team, bringing on additional Consultant Child and Adolescent Psychiatrist with expertise in and ADHD across the lifespan. We are further expanding provisions for children’s neurodevelopmental assessment and management including ADHD and autism by recruiting additional Consultant Child and Adolescent Psychiatrist. We’ve introduced gender-sensitive assessment pathways for adults who mask, and strengthened our CAMHS provision for children and young people who need support that looks at the whole picture — not just a single diagnosis in isolation.
We’ve also seen a continued rise in adults seeking assessment — many in their thirties, forties, and beyond — and it’s been a privilege to be part of those journeys. A diagnosis isn’t a label. It’s a framework that helps people understand how their brain works and, often for the first time, stop fighting against it.
The Bigger Picture
Nationally, NHS waiting lists for autism assessment remain stubbornly long — over 250,000 people at last count, with most waiting well beyond the recommended 13 weeks. The government’s independent review of autism and ADHD services, launched in late 2025, is due to report this summer. We’re hopeful it will drive real change.
Celebrating the Day
World Autism Day is, above all, a day to listen. To celebrate the autistic people in our communities — their perspectives, their strengths, and the richness they bring. Not as a deficit to be managed, but as people whose minds work differently and who deserve to thrive.
From everyone at Oxford Brain & Mind — happy World Autism Day 2026.

