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Supporting PDA: A Practical Guide for Support Workers

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A Practical, Neuroaffirming Guide for Support Workers

Supporting someone with a PDA (Pathological Demand Avoidance) profile requires a very different lens. Traditional behaviour strategies often fall flat. Reward systems can increase anxiety. Firm instructions can escalate distress. And what looks like refusal is often a nervous system in survival mode.

Supporting PDAers is a comprehensive, practical guide written specifically for disability support workers, mentors, youth workers, and frontline staff who are walking alongside PDA individuals every day. This is not a surface-level overview of PDA. It is a deeply grounded, nervous-system-informed roadmap that explains why PDAers respond the way they do, and how to adjust your support in ways that genuinely build safety, autonomy, and long-term capacity.

Inside this book, you will find a clear, compassionate explanation of PDA through the lens of Polyvagal Theory, executive functioning research, self-determination theory, trauma-informed practice, and neurodiversity-affirming frameworks. You will learn how to reduce demands without lowering expectations, how to use declarative language effectively, how to co-regulate during meltdowns, how to scaffold daily living skills without power struggles, and how to support social participation without coercion.

The book also addresses working collaboratively with families and teams, and importantly, how to protect yourself from burnout in relational support work.

This guide was written by Kirsty Beazley, a therapeutic social worker and founder of Mind Co., a neuroaffirming practice supporting autistic and PDA individuals and their families across Australia. Kirsty brings together professional expertise, extensive frontline experience in disability support, and lived insight into the realities families face. Her work is grounded in safety-over-compliance, partnership-over-power, and dignity-first practice. She has supported families navigating school distress, shutdowns, executive functioning challenges, community access barriers, and the daily complexity of PDA. This book reflects that real-world experience — not just theory, but what actually works.

At its heart, Supporting PDAers shifts the focus away from managing behaviour and toward understanding the nervous system. It helps support workers move from reacting to resistance, to recognising protective responses. It replaces power struggles with collaboration. It reframes progress as safety, connection, and growing capacity, rather than simple compliance.

If you have ever felt unsure how to approach a PDAer without escalating anxiety… if you’ve questioned whether traditional strategies are doing more harm than good… or if you want to feel confident, steady, and ethically grounded in your support work, this book was written for you.

You do not need to be firmer.
You do not need more behaviour strategies.
You need understanding, practical tools, and a framework that respects autonomy while building growth.

Supporting PDAers gives you exactly that!