Learning Disability and Autism Awareness in Caregiving
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“This course contains the use of artificial intelligence.”
Become the caregiver every person with a learning disability or autism deserves — and the one every family hopes for.
1.5 million people in the UK have a learning disability. Over 700,000 people have autism. Yet research from the LeDeR review shows people with a learning disability still die, on average, more than 20 years earlier than the general population — often from causes that were entirely preventable with the right care, the right communication, and the right reasonable adjustments.
That gap isn't a medical mystery. It's a training gap.
This course closes it.
Whether you're a care assistant, support worker, healthcare professional, social care leader, family carer, or someone preparing for the Oliver McGowan Mandatory Training expectations — this masterclass gives you the full picture. You'll move beyond awareness into real, confident, capable practice.
By the end of this course, you won't just know about learning disability and autism. You'll know how to communicate, how to adjust environments, how to safeguard rights, how to respond in a crisis, and how to genuinely make someone's day — and life — better.
So, Why this course is different?
Most learning disability and autism courses stop at definitions. This one takes you all the way to bedside, doorstep, and dinner-table competence.
You'll get:
10 structured sections, 50+ focused lessons — bite-sized, easy to revisit
UK legal grounding — Mental Capacity Act, Equality Act, Human Rights Act, safeguarding law explained in plain English
Real caregiving scenarios — not theory, but situations you'll actually face
Lifetime access with mobile and TV viewing
Certificate of completion suitable for CPD portfolios, supervision records, and care provider audits
Content suitable for CQC inspection evidence and induction frameworks
Every person with a learning disability or autism deserves a caregiver who gets it. Not someone who tolerates them, manages them, or speaks over them — but someone who sees them, respects them, and advocates for them.
That caregiver could be you.
Enrol now and start the section that will change how you care — for the rest of your career.
No prior qualifications needed — we start from the ground up
A willingness to reflect on your own assumptions and grow your practice
Pen and paper (or a notes app) for the reflective exercises in each section
Understand learning disability across the full spectrum — from mild to profound and multiple learning disabilities (PMLD)
Recognise autism as a different way of experiencing the world — and support each person's identity with dignity
Communicate effectively with people who are non-speaking, semi-speaking, or use alternative methods
Identify and respond to sensory needs and environmental stressors before they become crises
Apply the social model of disability in everyday caregiving decisions
Make and document reasonable adjustments under the Equality Act 2010
Use Hospital Passports and the Reasonable Adjustment Flag to advocate inside healthcare settings
Apply the Mental Capacity Act 2005 — including best-interest decisions and decision-specific capacity
Recognise, report, and prevent hate crime, abuse, and safeguarding concerns
Respond confidently during mental health crises and challenging behaviour incidents
Understand the "I, We, Us, Our" approach and the Triangle of Care for family-inclusive practice
Support smooth transitions from children's to adult services
Distinguish equality from equity — and deliver inclusive services in practice
Care assistants, support workers, and personal assistants working in residential, supported living, domiciliary or day services
Nurses, healthcare assistants, GPs, dentists, paramedics, and allied health professionals
Social workers, occupational therapists, and speech & language therapists
Care home managers, registered managers, and team leaders building staff competency
Special educational needs (SEN) staff, teaching assistants, and education support workers
Family carers and personal advocates supporting a loved one
Anyone preparing for the Oliver McGowan Mandatory Training in Learning Disability and Autism
Students entering health and social care careers



