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Sirens, bright lights, crowded scenes—now imagine all of that with a nervous system tuned to notice every sound and sensation at full volume. We sit down with school principal and trainer Jennifer Kaufman to unpack how autism can look like “defiance” or “intoxication” in the field—and why small, precise shifts from first responders can completely change the outcome.
Jennifer shares a practical playbook for police, firefighters, EMS, and dispatch: trade “calm down” for literal, single-step instructions; build in longer pauses for processing; use one clear voice instead of a crowd; and keep simple tools ready, like a notepad or a tablet for alternative communication. We talk through common presentations—lack of eye contact, scripting, stimming—and how to distinguish them from impairment. She introduces New Jersey’s Blue Envelope program, which helps during traffic stops by giving officers essential info up front, and we break down how to partner with families on scene without judgment so their expertise becomes an asset, not a conflict.
The conversation also tackles the hard reality of elopement and water safety. Many autistic individuals are drawn to water, and a large share of accidental deaths involve drowning. Jennifer outlines an actionable community plan: check water first when someone is missing, coordinate fast, and layer prevention with swim lessons, door alarms, and trackers. Along the way, we look at school outreach that normalizes responder gear and sounds, reducing fear long before an emergency. The throughline is empathy: slow down, step back, observe, and ask what this person needs right now.
If you serve your community—or love someone on the spectrum—this episode is a field guide to safer, calmer, more human encounters. Subscribe, share with your team, and leave a review with the tactic you’ll try next; your insight might help another crew keep someone safe tomorrow.
Get connected with Jennifer & First Response Autism
📧 [email protected]
📱 (201)497-0536
🌐 firstresponseautism.com
Practical Autism Training for First Responders & Law Enforcement
🔥Let's Be Friends
https://www.facebook.com/share/1EjJ6tMtyk/?mibextid=wwXIfr
https://www.instagram.com/sitaroundthefire.co?igsh=MTN2OTljNTNqYjJwaw%3D%3D&utm_source=qr
https://www.tiktok.com/@sitaroundthefire.co?_t=ZP-8zNMiGL9hl8&_r=1
By Ashlea DillardSend us a text
Sirens, bright lights, crowded scenes—now imagine all of that with a nervous system tuned to notice every sound and sensation at full volume. We sit down with school principal and trainer Jennifer Kaufman to unpack how autism can look like “defiance” or “intoxication” in the field—and why small, precise shifts from first responders can completely change the outcome.
Jennifer shares a practical playbook for police, firefighters, EMS, and dispatch: trade “calm down” for literal, single-step instructions; build in longer pauses for processing; use one clear voice instead of a crowd; and keep simple tools ready, like a notepad or a tablet for alternative communication. We talk through common presentations—lack of eye contact, scripting, stimming—and how to distinguish them from impairment. She introduces New Jersey’s Blue Envelope program, which helps during traffic stops by giving officers essential info up front, and we break down how to partner with families on scene without judgment so their expertise becomes an asset, not a conflict.
The conversation also tackles the hard reality of elopement and water safety. Many autistic individuals are drawn to water, and a large share of accidental deaths involve drowning. Jennifer outlines an actionable community plan: check water first when someone is missing, coordinate fast, and layer prevention with swim lessons, door alarms, and trackers. Along the way, we look at school outreach that normalizes responder gear and sounds, reducing fear long before an emergency. The throughline is empathy: slow down, step back, observe, and ask what this person needs right now.
If you serve your community—or love someone on the spectrum—this episode is a field guide to safer, calmer, more human encounters. Subscribe, share with your team, and leave a review with the tactic you’ll try next; your insight might help another crew keep someone safe tomorrow.
Get connected with Jennifer & First Response Autism
📧 [email protected]
📱 (201)497-0536
🌐 firstresponseautism.com
Practical Autism Training for First Responders & Law Enforcement
🔥Let's Be Friends
https://www.facebook.com/share/1EjJ6tMtyk/?mibextid=wwXIfr
https://www.instagram.com/sitaroundthefire.co?igsh=MTN2OTljNTNqYjJwaw%3D%3D&utm_source=qr
https://www.tiktok.com/@sitaroundthefire.co?_t=ZP-8zNMiGL9hl8&_r=1