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Posts tagged School Absence

School absence and school refusal (hemmasittare) in Sweden: why it starts, who it affects, and how early support can prevent it.

The Nuro team

What Attention's 2025 school survey says about NPF students

Sweden's largest neurodiversity organisation asked more than 2,800 families how school is going for their child with ADHD, autism, or a related condition. The answers are a self-reported picture, not official statistics, but they sharpen the same gap the official numbers show: most of these students have absence linked to their condition, and support arrives late or not at all.

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The Nuro team

When a child stops coming to school, what is the school required to do?

When a student has repeated or extended absence, valid or invalid, Swedish law requires the principal to make sure it is investigated promptly, together with the student, guardians, and elevhälsan, and to report it to the huvudman. There is no fixed number of days. Here is what skollagen actually requires.

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The Nuro team

How many students miss large parts of school in Sweden? Officially, no one counts.

Sweden does not collect school-absence statistics nationally on a regular basis. The one national mapping that tried found tens of thousands of students with extensive absence. A national absence register is now on the way, and it singles out neurodivergent students. Here is what the numbers say.

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The Nuro team

The false economy of cutting special-education support

Sweden's school absence keeps climbing and the long-term cost runs into the tens of billions. So why are municipalities cutting the special-education support that prevents it? A look at the economics of catching students before they disappear.

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The Nuro team

Sweden's 'hemmasittare' have doubled in four years. Most of them are neurodivergent.

Chronic school absence in Sweden has roughly doubled in four years, and a large share of the students who disappear are neurodivergent. Absence is rarely the start of the problem. It's the end of one. Here's what comes before, and why catching it early changes everything.

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