How does speech and language therapy target pragmatic repair strategies for autism?
According to the NHS, autistic people can have lifelong differences in communication and social interaction, which can make everyday conversations more effortful. The NHS also notes that a GP or autism assessment team can refer someone to a speech and language therapist when communication difficulties are affecting life at home, school or work.
Understanding the concept
Pragmatic repair strategies are the tools we use to fix a conversation when something goes wrong. That might include:
- noticing confusion or misunderstanding
- asking for clarification
- rephrasing what you said
- checking what the other person meant
- signalling you need more time to process
The National Autistic Society explains that autistic communication styles can differ from non autistic expectations, including differences in reading cues and “reading between the lines”. This means breakdowns are often a mismatch between two communication styles, not a failure by one person.
Evidence and impact
The NICE guideline for autistic adults describes persistent social communication differences and supports structured, communication focused approaches that help people navigate social situations. In the NICE recommendations, programmes are expected to be adapted to the person’s needs and preferences, which is important when teaching repair skills like clarification questions or checking meaning.
Research on pragmatic and figurative language helps explain why repair strategies matter. A review of figurative language processing in autism reports that autistic groups often find implied meaning, irony and similar non literal language harder on average, which can increase the chance of misunderstandings unless there are clear opportunities to clarify and repair.
Practical support and approaches
The RCSLT explains that speech and language therapists support understanding and use of language, social communication and everyday interaction across settings. When the goal is pragmatic repair, SLT work often includes:
- Teaching “permission to clarify” phrases, such as “I’m not sure what you mean, can you say that another way?” and practising them until they feel natural
- Building “comprehension monitoring”, meaning noticing signs you might be lost, overloaded, or interpreting something literally
- Role play and rehearsal for real situations, like classrooms, meetings, phone calls, healthcare appointments, or friendship groups
- Helping families, teachers and colleagues communicate more clearly so repair is shared, reflecting National Autistic Society advice that relationships work best when both sides check understanding and avoid assumptions
Visual tools can help make repair more concrete. Guidance from Newcastle Hospitals recommends approaches like social stories and comic strip conversations to explore what happened in an interaction, what each person might have meant, and what could be tried next time. In practice, SLTs often adapt these tools to support repair steps, such as spotting the moment confusion began and choosing a safe, self respectful way to clarify.
Challenges and considerations
Not everyone wants the same type of repair support. Some autistic people want strategies for specific environments like work, education, or healthcare, while others prioritise reducing anxiety and avoiding social exhaustion.
It also matters how goals are framed. The RCSLT and Newcastle Hospitals emphasise person centred, neurodiversity affirming support and caution against pushing “performance” goals that increase masking. In repair work, that usually means the aim is autonomy and reduced distress, not forcing eye contact, small talk, or a particular “social style”.
How services can help
The NHS explains that referral routes can include your GP or autism assessment team. In adult services, NICE highlights the need for communication adjustments, such as clear language, checking understanding and accessible information, which can support repair by reducing the number of breakdowns in the first place.
Speech and language therapy can also involve the wider system around the person, for example helping schools, workplaces and families use shared repair approaches so the autistic person is not carrying all the responsibility for making conversations work.
Takeaway
Pragmatic repair strategies are practical tools for handling misunderstandings without shame or panic, and speech and language therapy can teach and practise them in ways that fit the person’s real life. Guidance from the NHS, NICE, the National Autistic Society, the RCSLT and Newcastle Hospitals supports an approach where repair is collaborative, respectful and focused on making communication feel safer and clearer.
If you or someone you support would benefit from early identification or structured autism guidance, visit Autism Detect, a UK-based platform offering professional assessment tools and evidence-informed support for autistic individuals and families.

