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Sex differences in mental health disorders among autistic men and women: retrospective service audit of a random cohort
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Sex differences in mental health disorders among autistic men and women: retrospective service audit of a random cohort

Charlotte Cliffe, Henrietta Rees, Howard Childs, Rebecca Day, Elizabeth Shade, Luke Simmond, Jo Jennison, Clare Allely and Raja Anindya Sekhar Mukherjee
BJPsych bulletin, pp.1-5
07/04/2026
PMID: 41943221

Abstract

Life Sciences & Biomedicine Psychiatry Science & Technology
Aims and method This study investigated mental health diagnoses in autistic adults to determine whether there were any sex differences in presentation. Autistic adults attending the neurodevelopmental service at Surrey and Borders Partnership NHS Foundation Trust were included.Results As part of a service audit, 150 random adults (75 males and females) were selected and their case notes were reviewed. Mental health diagnoses were common: 36% had current suicidal ideation, 20% had attempted suicide, 40% had a past or current diagnosis of anxiety and 62% had a past or current diagnosis of depression. There were more women diagnosed with an eating disorder (9% female, 0% male) and with a historical suicide attempt (21% female, 9% male). However, using a Holm-Bonferroni correction, there were no statistically significant sex differences between mental health diagnoses. Among both sexes, a significant number had been exposed to prenatal and early childhood trauma, nearly 10% had experienced physical trauma, abuse, neglect or assault, and nearly a third had been through parental separation.Clinical implications This demonstrates that autistic people presenting to a National Health Service diagnostic clinic are more at risk of experiencing trauma, which subsequently increases their risk of mental illness, alongside any neurological predisposition.
url
https://doi.org/10.1192/bjb.2026.10217View
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