Call us now 01926 402 498
You are not alone. What happened to you is not your fault.
Sexual trauma is when someone does something sexual to you without your full agreement, safety or understanding. It can happen in many ways. In person or online, by someone older or the same age, by someone you trust or someone you barely know.
If you’ve had an experience that made you feel unsafe, ashamed, anxious, scared or confused — that matters. You deserve to understand what has happened and get support.
Research shows that young people who are autistic, have ADHD, or experience other neurodivergent traits can be at higher risk of sexual exploitation and abuse. This doesn’t mean you “invite” harm — it means adults and systems often misunderstand how you process social signals, boundaries and relationships, and sometimes fail to protect you.
Here’s why this can matter:
This combination can mean harmful behaviour goes unnoticed, misinterpreted, or dismissed — even by adults who are meant to protect you.
What Is Sexual Trauma?
Sexual trauma can include, but is not limited to:
Sexual trauma is about power and control, not attraction or affection.
You do not have to describe something as “rape” or “abuse” to deserve support. If something felt unsafe, unwanted, frightening, confusing or wrong – it matters.
What Happens to the Brain and Body After Sexual Trauma?
Sexual trauma isn’t just something that happens in the moment. It can affect your brain, body and emotions for a long time afterwards.
Common responses include:
For neurodivergent young people, these reactions may be misunderstood as “just autism” or “behaviour problems” unless adults understand trauma.
Trauma and neurodivergence can interact, meaning the same behaviours can come from both trauma and differences in sensory, emotional or social processing.
This does not mean you’re “overreacting”. It means your brain is trying to keep you safe after something unsafe happened.
Why It’s Hard to Recognise or Report
Sometimes sexual harm feels confusing rather than scary.
This can be because:
Neurodivergent young people are often not given enough clear, autism and ADHD aware sex education that teaches what consent really means — not just “don’t do X or Y” but how to understand your own body, choices and rights.
Sexual trauma can show up in many ways. None of these signs mean you “imagined” it. They are often how trauma shows up, especially in autistic or ADHD brains. You might notice:
Feeling sad, numb, anxious or ashamed, panic or fear when thinking about someone, feeling mistrustful of people.
Headaches, stomach aches, nightmares or trouble sleeping, being triggered by touch or closeness, heightened sensory overwhelm.
Avoiding people or places, acting out, self‑harm or risky behaviour, changes in school‑work focus, increased meltdowns or shutdowns
Consent means:
Consent is ongoing — it can change at any moment.
If someone:
That is not consent.
You deserve support that understands both trauma and how your brain works. A good support plan looks different for everyone and that’s ok. You deserve support that fits you, not expectations that you must fit the support.
If you are under 18 and need support, you have the right to be listened to and protected.
Talk to a trusted adult
This could be a parent, carer, teacher, youth worker or family member.
School safeguarding lead
This is a teacher or staff member trained to help young people in situations like this.
Professional support
If you are in immediate danger, call 999.
Write things down
Show this page to a trusted adult
Use online chat support
Ask someone else to help you reach out
You don’t have to explain everything perfectly. You just need someone to hear you.
Legislation and Statutory Guidance (UK)
HM Government (2023). Working Together to Safeguard Children.
UK Parliament (2003). Sexual Offences Act 2003.
UK Parliament (1989; 2004). Children Act 1989 and Children Act 2004.
National Clinical Guidance
National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) (2018, updated 2023). Post-traumatic stress disorder (NG116).
NHS (2023–2024). Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in children and young people.
Child Sexual Abuse and Exploitation (UK)
NSPCC (2023–2024). Child sexual abuse and exploitation guidance.
Centre of expertise on child sexual abuse (CSA Centre) (2023). Key messages from research on child sexual abuse.
Peer-Reviewed Research on Neurodivergence and Sexual Victimisation
Brown-Lavoie, S. M., Viecili, M. A., & Weiss, J. A. (2014). Sexual knowledge and victimisation in adults with autism spectrum disorders. Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 44(9), 2185–2196.
Rumball, F., Happé, F., & Grey, N. (2020). Experience of trauma and PTSD symptoms in autistic adults: Risk of PTSD development following DSM-5 and non-DSM-5 traumatic life events. Autism Research, 13(12), 2122–2132.
Allnock, D., et al. (2025). Intersecting Needs: Neurodivergence, Gender and Sexual Violence in Local Support Systems. Safer Young Lives Research Centre, University of Bedfordshire.