Exploring the Diagnostic Experiences of Women with Autism in Adulthood: A Narrative Synthesis of Qualitative Research (2020-2024)
ORCID
- Robin Iliffe-Lewis: 0009-0008-0320-5200
- Alison Bacon: 0000-0003-4279-3814
Abstract
Autistic women frequently encounter delayed diagnoses, misdiagnosis, stigma, and inadequate support, as highlighted by previous research (Kelly et al., 2024). Recent increased awareness of gender differences in autism prompted this narrative review, synthesising 11 qualitative studies from September 2020 to October 2024 to explore recent qualitative research on the diagnostic experiences of autistic women diagnosed in adulthood. The findings reaffirm persistent pre- and post-diagnostic challenges and biases, while uncovering new insights: diagnosis often follows a crisis, involves active ‘de-masking’ during clinical assessments, and is increasingly driven by women’s self-advocacy to counter clinician limitations. These results suggest there may exist gaps in diagnostic processes and support services, highlighting a potential need for enhanced clinician training and comprehensive post-diagnostic support. Clinical implications and future recommendations are discussed.
DOI Link
Publication Date
2026-03-25
Publication Title
Review Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders
ISSN
2195-7177
Acceptance Date
2026-02-03
Deposit Date
2026-03-25
Embargo Period
2027-03-25
Recommended Citation
Iliffe-Lewis, R., & Bacon, A. (2026) 'Exploring the Diagnostic Experiences of Women with Autism in Adulthood: A Narrative Synthesis of Qualitative Research (2020-2024)', Review Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, . Available at: 10.1007/s40489-026-00541-5
This item is under embargo until 25 March 2027
