Learning Disability Crisis Support – Global
A calm starting point for people with learning disabilities, families, carers, whānau, support workers, educators, and professionals looking for clear, respectful crisis pathways. This page focuses on plain language, communication access, support people, text/chat options, location pathways, and safer help when things feel urgent or overwhelming.
If you need help right now
If you or someone else is in immediate danger, at risk of harm, or unable to stay safe, contact local emergency services now.
- New Zealand: 111
- Australia: 000
- United States / Canada: 911
- UK: 999 or 112
- Europe: 112
Gentle note
A person with a learning disability may need information explained slowly, in plain language, with pictures, written steps, extra time, or help from someone they trust. Crisis support should be respectful, patient, accessible, and centred on safety.
Quick pathways
Choose the option that best matches what is happening right now. If one pathway feels too hard, choose the easiest next step.
I need emergency help now
Use local emergency services first if there is immediate danger, medical risk, violence, abuse, suicide risk, or someone cannot stay safe.
Open emergency numbersI need text or chat support
Text, chat, or online support may feel easier if speaking on the phone is confusing, stressful, or inaccessible.
Open text/chat supportI need accessible support
Find crisis support pathways that consider disability access, communication barriers, plain language, and support people.
Open accessibility supportSearch & filter learning disability crisis pathways
Use this section to quickly find the support pathway you need.
Plain-language support
Use simple words, short steps, pictures, written notes, and repeat information without rushing.
View plain-language tipsSupport person pathway
A trusted person may help explain what is happening, understand options, and support safer decisions.
Open carers supportText, chat & non-phone support
Useful when phone calls are confusing, stressful, hard to process, or not accessible.
Open text/chat optionsImmediate safety
If there is immediate danger, abuse, violence, medical risk, or suicide risk, use emergency services first.
Open emergency numbersFind support by location
Use the location hub to find emergency numbers, crisis lines, text options, and local support pathways.
Open location hubProfessional support
For health, disability, education, community, and social service professionals supporting someone in crisis.
Open professional supportFamilies, carers & whānau
Supporters may need clear steps for safety, communication, calming, advocacy, and follow-up.
Open carers supportEasy Read & visual supports
Pictures, symbols, checklists, simple choices, and written steps can make crisis support easier to understand.
Open accessibility supportCommunity workers & navigators
For people helping someone access services, understand options, communicate needs, or move through crisis pathways.
Open community supportPlain-language crisis support
When someone is scared, overwhelmed, unsafe, or confused, complicated information can make things harder. Plain language helps people understand what is happening and what the next step is.
Use short sentences
Say one thing at a time. Avoid long explanations when someone is distressed.
Give clear choices
Offer two simple options where possible, such as “call now” or “text now”.
Repeat without shame
People may need information repeated. That is okay.
Write it down
Written steps, pictures, or checklists can help someone remember what to do.
Communication access during crisis
People with learning disabilities may communicate in different ways. Some people use speech, pictures, signs, AAC, writing, gestures, support people, or simple yes/no answers.
Helpful communication steps
- Ask one question at a time.
- Use plain language.
- Allow extra time to answer.
- Check understanding without blame.
- Offer written or visual information.
- Ask if a trusted person can help.
Things to avoid
- Do not rush the person.
- Do not talk over them.
- Do not assume they understand everything.
- Do not shame them for needing support.
- Do not ignore their choices or communication method.
Support should be person-centred
A learning disability does not mean someone should be left out of decisions. Support should help the person understand, communicate, and stay as involved as possible.
For carers, family, whānau, friends, and advocates
If you are supporting someone with a learning disability in crisis, your role may include helping them feel safe, understand choices, communicate needs, and access the right help.
What can help
- Stay calm and use simple words.
- Explain what is happening step by step.
- Help the person contact emergency or crisis support.
- Use their preferred communication method.
- Check if they need food, water, medication, rest, or a quieter space.
- Write down key information if needed.
Safety signs to take seriously
- They cannot stay safe.
- They may hurt themselves or someone else.
- They are being harmed, abused, threatened, or exploited.
- They are confused, missing, unsafe, or medically unwell.
- They need urgent protection or emergency help.
Supporter pathway
Use the carers page for extra guidance on helping someone else through crisis, distress, overwhelm, or urgent safety concerns.
Open carers supportFor professionals and frontline helpers
Professionals can reduce harm by making crisis support easier to understand, slower, clearer, and more accessible.
Ask access questions
- “How do you like information explained?”
- “Would pictures or writing help?”
- “Do you want someone you trust with you?”
- “Do you need more time?”
- “What helps you feel safer?”
Make support easier
- Use plain language.
- Break steps into small parts.
- Check understanding gently.
- Offer written summaries.
- Include support people where appropriate.
- Respect consent, dignity, and safeguarding needs.
Professional pathway
Use professional support pages for safeguarding, referral, crisis response, accessibility, and follow-up planning.
Open professional supportWhere to go next
This page connects into the wider Aspie Answers crisis support structure. Use these links to move into related support pathways.
Neurodivergent Crisis Support
Return to the main neurodivergent crisis support doorway.
Open neurodivergent supportAccessibility-Specific Crisis Support
Find crisis support pathways focused on access needs, disability barriers, communication, and inclusive support.
Open accessibility supportText / Chat Crisis Support
Use text, chat, or online options if speaking on the phone feels too hard.
Open text/chat supportCrisis Support by Location
Find crisis support by country, region, or wider location pathway.
Open location hubParents & Carers Crisis Support
For people supporting someone else through crisis, distress, overwhelm, or urgent safety concerns.
Open carers supportMedical & Health Professionals
For professionals supporting people with learning disabilities safely during crisis or urgent distress.
Open professional supportCommunity Workers & Navigators
For support workers, advocates, navigators, peer supporters, and community helpers.
Open community supportHidden Disabilities Crisis Support
For people whose disability or support needs may not be visible to others.
Open hidden disabilities supportCrisis Support Main Index
Return to the main crisis support hub and choose a broader pathway.
Open main indexPeople with learning disabilities deserve crisis support that is easy to understand, respectful, accessible, and person-centred. If one pathway does not feel right, it is okay to try another option, ask someone trusted to help, or use emergency services if safety is urgent.