I have said it before and I'll repeat it: I think Nolan would be better in disabled care. For his family, it would give them a break from Nolan, and probably help Nolan's relationship with them. For Nolan, he'd have staff more suited and experienced/trained in dealing with his behaviour, he would be able to watch his vtubers and LMAO on the internet with less interruption, be given a workload more suitable for him, and he'd get referrals to professionals that could help him. Over the long-term, it might even help Nolan develop better routines and behaviour patterns.
That would be the best way to fix the "mindbreak", for lack of a better word.