07/05/2026
Why Oliver McGowan Training Matters More Than Ever
Every person deserves to be treated with dignity, understanding, and compassion — especially when accessing healthcare and support services. Yet for many autistic people and people with a learning disability, experiences within health and social care can still feel frightening, misunderstood, or unsafe.
This is why the Oliver McGowan Mandatory Training on Learning Disability and Autism is so important.
The training was created following the tragic death of Oliver McGowan, an autistic teenager with a mild learning disability whose family fought tirelessly for better understanding and safer care after serious failures in the healthcare system contributed to his death.
Oliver’s story should never have happened.
The training is not simply another “tick-box exercise.” It is about changing attitudes, improving communication, and helping professionals understand the needs, rights, and lived experiences of autistic people and people with learning disabilities.
Good care starts with understanding.
The Oliver McGowan training helps staff: • Improve communication skills
• Understand sensory needs and distress behaviours
• Reduce diagnostic overshadowing
• Deliver person-centred care
• Build confidence when supporting autistic individuals and people with learning disabilities
• Create safer and more inclusive environments
Most importantly, it gives people a voice.
What makes this training especially powerful is that it is co-delivered by experts with lived experience. Listening directly to autistic people and people with learning disabilities creates real empathy, insight, and lasting change.
Training saves lives.
When professionals understand how someone communicates distress, processes information, or experiences the world differently, outcomes improve dramatically. People feel safer, respected, and heard.
At MDT Online, we are proud to deliver Oliver McGowan Mandatory Training, helping organisations build more inclusive, compassionate, and informed services. By investing in meaningful training, we can create lasting cultural change and improve outcomes for the people who rely on our support every day.
We all have a responsibility to create services and communities where everyone belongs.
Oliver’s legacy is one of change, awareness, and hope — and that legacy must continue.