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5 Ways Autism Skills Can Help Emergency Responders On Scene

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image courtesy of http://resources1.news.com.au/

The nature of my training classes unfortunately tend to focus on the struggles and deficits side of the autism spectrum, as this is the primary way for responders to quickly identify someone as autistic on the scene of a crime, fire, disaster or medical call and potentially adapt their response. In an emergency situation, being able to recognize the appropriate signs and adjust communication can be the difference between a potentially negative and positive outcome.

I tend to go a bit deeper in my weekly articles, offering more detailed techniques for de-escalating dangerous behaviors, discussing comorbid medical conditions for better patient assessment, proper protocol for handling service dogs, or explaining why people with autism are often drawn to water. What happens if we flip that proverbial coin for a minute and ask, how can someone with autism be helpful on scene?

People with autism display a wide range of intellectual abilities. Some show exceptional talents despite some functional challenges. Along with the struggles, autism can bring individual strengths along with special abilities, such as strong memory skills, math skills, three-dimensional thinking, musical ability, artistic ability, honesty, and the ability to intensely focus on an interest.

While only 10 percent of people with autism have savant syndrome (a condition in which a person with a disability such as an autism spectrum disorder demonstrates profound and prodigious capacities or abilities far in excess of what would be considered normal), many do have special abilities. These may include:

  • Calendar calculation – identifying the days of the week on which any date fell or will fall in a wide span of years
  • Memorizing large chunks of facts about specific subjects
  • Dismantling and reassembling complex machines
  • Working with computers

While verbal instructions are more challenging, people with autism do have advanced visual-spatial abilities, such as solving puzzles or matching items that display some sort of pattern.

How could these things help during an emergency call?

Autism Skill #1: Rote Memory Ability

An excellent rote memory – memorizing large amounts of material or storing huge lists of items in their minds and repeating them accurately can be a huge help when piecing together what may have happened on scene. This could be recalling details of an auto accident or trying to determine how a crime was committed.

Autism Skill #2: Details and Patterns

To piggyback on rote memory, the ability to notice small, individual details is a huge asset on any scene. While autistic individuals may not be able to see the big picture or piece together the information to determine meaning, they can not only recite details no one else may have noticed but often see a distinctive pattern in those details.

Autism Skill #3: Calculations

Some people with autism also have quick mathematical calculation skills – they’ re able to mentally add, subtract, multiply and divide large numbers at astonishing speeds. This could be helpful, again, in any line of questioning where numbers or specific times are important to the situation.

Autism Skill #4: Artistic Talent

Being masterful with expressing yourself through drawings can aid in finding out what happened on scene, especially if the person with autism is nonverbal. Even if they are able to communicate in a typical way, drawings can both relay missed details of the scene and the person’s perspective – how they experienced the situation.

Autism Skill #5: Musical Talent

How could someone’s musical talent possibly be of assistance during an emergency?

Many people with autism spectrum disorder have outstanding abilities in tone recognition; they can be highly methodical listeners and are able to access musical details more readily than others. The ability to mimic an exact sound they heard in perfect pitch – such as the order of numbers punched in a keypad – is definitely a skill that could come in handy on scene.

I know it can be challenging to communicate and interact with people with autism on scene, especially if they are experiencing sensory overwhelm from the noise and chaos of the emergency situation. But remember, autistic people are typically good-natured and honest, and almost always have a genuine desire to help. Why not welcome their skills and abilities? You may just end up with critical details that no one else was able to see!

right-arrow-hi

Using Redirection to Avert Harmful Stimming

right-arrow-hiRepetitive behaviors such as spinning objects, opening and closing things repeatedly, rocking, arm-flapping, squealing, making loud noises or even hitting are common in those on the autism spectrum. Often ritualistic, they are known as perseveration or self-stimulatory behavior (stimming). While they may seem pointless and “weird” to us, they fulfill a very important function for the person carrying them out, such as relieving anxiety, counteracting and overwhelming sensory environment, regulating the nervous system or simply letting off steam. The frequency and severity of the behaviors varies from person to person.

When Stimming Becomes Dangerous

When responding to a call involving an autistic individual, you may encounter someone stimming in response to the stress of the emergency situation you’ve been called to. I always advocate letting the behavior continue, as it typically helps the person self-calm. The only exception is when they are hurting themselves or others. Self-calming may quickly escalate into self-injurious behavior such as hitting themselves, head banging, chewing their hands or biting themselves.

Redirection by definition means to direct again; to change the direction or focus; to channel into a new direction. It is a tool that can help interrupt the behavior. If the scene is safe you may be able to use this technique to modify harmful behaviors and help direct the person to an alternative, safer one. It may take a few attempts, but can successfully take the focus off negative coping behaviors and de-escalate the situation.

To redirect you need to quickly interrupt the negative behavior, with as minimal attention as possible. Of course, done at home in a calm environment a caregiver has an opportunity to teach, practice and continue positive reinforcement until the person can successfully recognize and modify the behavior. In the field, you may have to use a more dramatic interrupting method. Remember that you are not punishing the person for inappropriate behavior – a behavior that is serving a purpose for them – you are more or less “shocking” their system to allow for a new focus. This may look like using a different tone of voice, issuing a job or task, or even doing something outlandish, like breaking out into song. Yes, I have done this before with successful results!

I recently saw this on Facebook… definitely a true story for me.

redirection for autism meltdown

Initially you want to start with a high-probability request: one the person is LIKELY to comply with on the first request, without further prompting (“point to your nose”, “stand up”, etc.). Follow that with a series of two or three more high-P requests together and one low-P request (one the person is UNLIKELY to comply with). Keep it simple and offer praise after each successful high-P compliance. Extend and magnify praise when they comply with the low-P request.

When you are redirecting behavior, remember the whole point is to emphasize the replacement behavior that you want. If there is no replacement option, it will be impossible to redirect.

autism criminal justice

Autism and the Criminal Justice System

autism criminal justiceDuring the introduction of my Autism Training for Emergency Responders class I talk about how special needs individuals are seven times more likely to interact with first responders, usually due to wandering, comorbid medical conditions and severely escalated behaviors that may mimic mental illness, drug abuse or just plain non-compliance.

What happens when someone with autism enters the criminal justice system? There are currently no statistics going beyond interactions in the field, but it certainly does provide a challenge and opportunity for myriad complications.

Problems with sensory overload, poor understanding of sarcasm, idioms and exaggeration as well as non-verbal communication such as facial expressions and body language can foster inappropriate responses that lead to trouble for the autistic individual. Add to the mix their trusting vulnerability and inability to deal with changes in routine or structure and people with autism often get into trouble without even knowing they committed an offense.

I’m not saying that someone with Asperger’s or autism will NEVER intentionally break the law, but so often these situations get easily misconstrued. The individual may have technically committed an offense, though the criminal behavior might have been an act of impulsivity, with no intent to do harm.

My son will repeatedly make a threatening or, at the very least, rude remark to me and then is shocked when I get upset with him. He has learned to apologize when I tell him he was hurtful or inappropriate, yet he has no idea WHY he’s apologizing because in his mind, he simply made a truthful or logical statement. Or he was repeating something he heard but has no idea what it actually means.

These kinds of “processing differences” could lead to him getting in trouble with the law down the road. The Asperger/Autism Network cites examples of unintentional offenses such as:

  • Making threatening statements
  • Inappropriate sexual advances
  • Being an accomplice to a crime due to the influence of false friends
  • Making physical outbursts in a public place or within the community

Criminal justice professionals may observe a high-functioning autistic person as appearing “normal” then diagnose their seemingly odd behaviors – such as lack of eye contact, changing the subject and blunt honesty – as disrespectful, evasive and belligerent. Sometimes someone with autism uses loud vocal tones, repetitive motions and laughter as a way to cope with both the anxiety of the situation and the overwhelming sensory environment, which is often misread as guilty and remorseless behavior.

The following strategies will help prepare you for successful interaction and communicating:

  • Approach the person a quiet, non-threatening manner
  • Allow more time for processing questions and delayed responses
  • Do not interpret limited eye contact as deceit or evidence of guilt
  • Avoid phrases that have more than one meaning or may cause confusion when taken literally, such as “Are you pulling my leg?” or “What’s up your sleeve?”
  • You may need to repeat or rephrase your question
  • Stick to narrative style questions rather than “yes” or “no” type questions – they are more reliable
  • Be prepared to write down or draw out the question for visual processors
  • Be patient – avoid becoming emotionally aroused and upset
  • Be aware of sensory processing issues: keep lighting low, limit distracting images, eliminate the presence of non-essential personnel, avoid using perfume or aftershave if possible, and avoid touching the person unless absolutely necessary
  • Seek assistance from objective professionals that are familiar with autism

Most police departments have a Crisis Intervention Team, which staffs a psych nurse and an officer trained in psychiatric crisis management. They have many tools available to them that other officers may not. If you suspect autism, seek assistance from department assets such as a mobile crisis team or unit early on in the legal intervention, as they can help identify if the person may require special assistance from psychiatric professionals.

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Emergency Responders: Why Address Sensory Issues First?

image courtesy of freedigitalphotos.net

image courtesy of freedigitalphotos.net

Sensory Processing issues play a bigger role in the daily lives of those with Autism and Asperger’s than most people realize. No matter what behavior I’m addressing with my son or what I encounter on a call, I always start with reducing sensory triggers.

Years, ago, when I finally had a firm understanding of this why this works, I perpetually tried to explain it to the other adults, teachers, caretakers, and yes, even physicians in my son’s life, who insisted that my child needed to be medicated for hyperactive and impulsive behavior.

I remember waiting months to see a highly acclaimed pediatric neurologist before my son was officially diagnosed with Autism. He was four at the time. At our long-awaited appointment, we were in the waiting room for an hour and then the doctor’s office waiting for yet another hour. What four-year-old would NOT be climbing up the walls at that point?

The doctor came in and promptly spent 10 minutes with us.

“Write your name, son.”

“Stand on one foot and hop.”

“Copy this drawing of a tree.”

“Ma’am, your son has ADHD, fine motor dyspraxia, ODD (Oppositional Defiant Disorder), and maybe some sensory stuff going on. Here’s your prescription for Adderall. See you in six months.”

Whoa… wha? Oppositional DEFIANT Disorder? He was FOUR! When my daughter was four I practically wanted to SELL her. (Kidding. Mostly.) Of COURSE he was hyper – we just waited TWO hours in a closed room to see this man. And what’s with the meds? No explanation of any of these “disorders”? No constructive suggestions? No support or help?

Nope.

I researched all of the labels that supposedly defined my baby boy. Yes, he was hyperactive, but the first one that really grabbed my attention was Sensory Processing Disorder. I went through checklist upon checklist and instantly started understanding my son and the world he lives in. Many of his “quirks” were a direct stress-response to how he interprets all the sensory input from his day-to-day environment.

I soon had an entire sensory evaluation done (I say “soon,” it was actually another nine-month waiting list), and then I learned so much more about how my son experiences the world around him, and how physically painful it could be.

Once I started to differentiate between “My body hurts, I’m exploding inside and need help” and “I’m being a boy and testing my boundaries” my whole world changed, and so did my son’s.

What Does This Have To Do With Responding To Calls?

I’m a big fan of Asperger Experts – two adults with Asperger’s Syndrome that have navigated their way through the roughest times of childhood and adolescence and are now helping parents and educators do the same.

They published a video called, “The Sensory Funnel.” Although they are primarily speaking to parents and therapists (or those themselves that have Asperger’s), the scientific explanation about what’s going on is invaluable. You get to hear an adult’s first-hand experience of what the world feels like and how he not only learned to cope with all his struggles but to thrive in spite of them.

For us as responders, I chose this video for you to see as an “abbreviated” plan on scene – an explanation of why it’s imperative to deal with the sensory triggers first. The video also illustrates why trying to go from the top of the funnel down will most likely not get results, especially when trying to gain compliance or diffuse a situation.

Let me know what you think!

image courtesy of paals.org

Autism Tips for Emergency Responders: Service Dogs on Scene

image courtesy of paals.org

image courtesy of paals.org

If you have recently attended one of my Autism Training classes for emergency responders, you’ll recall a short video of a woman’s service dog that alerts to self-harm while she is having a meltdown. You can view that video here.

While I included that in my training to illustrate an adult with Asperger’s having a meltdown, someone in class brought up an excellent point: how do you, as a responder, recognize a service dog and what do you do with them on scene?

Project Chance explains that autism assistance dogs are somewhat unique. Unlike a guide dog that helps with physical tasks, autism assistance dogs mainly provide emotional support. They can also help with sensory processing issues by giving their handler a focal point, or a way to ground their sensory input when the environment is overwhelming.

Many autistic children especially have no concept of personal safety and are prone to wandering. A child may be tethered to the dog’s harness or the dog may be trained to alert to potential bolt risks.

Dogs can also be tasked-trained to use touch intervention, as well as pressure intervention and mobility assistance when repetitive or self-injurious behaviors occur.

How is a Service Dog Defined?

According to the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), service animals are defined as dogs that are individually trained to do work or perform tasks for people with disabilities. Service animals are working animals, not pets. The work or task a dog has been trained to provide must be directly related to the person’s disability.

Service animals must be allowed to accompany people with disabilities in all areas of a facility where the public is normally allowed to go.

The Ohio Department of Public Safety has a great downloadable trifold with tips for encountering service dogs. Here are some highlights from the brochure.

First and foremost, find out your agency’s policies on service animals! This includes how they define a service animal, information about applicable laws and how to comply with them, what to do if the handler is not in a condition to control the animal, proper movement and transport of the service animal, and veterinary facilities with whom there are established agreements for providing emergent care/boarding for service animals.

Next, you must determine if it is a family pet or a true service animal. The law permits you to ask these two questions only:

  1. Do you need the animal because of a disability?

  2. What tasks related to your disability has the animal been trained to do?

By Federal law, service animals are permitted to go wherever the public is allowed, including your ambulance. If it is not possible to keep a handler and their animal together (e.g., the handlers’ medical condition warrants transport by air or prevents the handler from controlling the animal) make sure a responsible party or someone with the handler’s permission can transport the animal safely and reunite them with their handler as soon as possible.

If the dog is being transported with the patient, load the dog last and unload it first, as this minimizes risk of injuring the animal and gives you needed space for maneuvering equipment.

If you must handle the dog, use the leash, not its harness. Use the side door of the ambulance for loading and unloading the animal; avoid open diamond plate gratings as they may injure the dog’s paws. If you need to lift the dog, put one arm behind the back legs, the other in front of the chest and gently lift. Offer to get food and any other supplies the dog may need before transporting.

Overall, try to accommodate the dog as you would a child alone with the patient. Take the dog with you and if the handler is unable to care for the dog at the hospital, attempt to notify a caretaker known to the handler for the dog, if possible.

You can download the entire helpful brochure here.

Have you encountered service dogs on scene? How did it go? Share your comments below!

image courtesy of freedigitalphotos.net

Autism Tips for Emergency Responders: Autism and Violence

image courtesy of freedigitalphotos.net

image courtesy of freedigitalphotos.net

My extended family doesn’t know a great deal about autism. My children and I don’t live near my mother or stepmother, and autism wasn’t even on my radar when my father passed away in 2001. The majority of information they receive about autism is what they hear in the news and any personal stories I choose to share about day to day living as a single mom with two autistic teens.

A family member recently asked me, “How bad is Justin?”

“What do you mean?” I replied.

“I saw on the news that a boy with autism got angry and bit his grandmother’s finger off. Is he violent like that? I’m worried.”

Officers frequently ask during my autism trainings if people with autism are more likely to abuse alcohol and drugs and commit violent crimes.

These are all great questions; however thanks to the media an already grossly misunderstood community is now feared and shunned as one being predisposed for violence, and even murder. Case in point, the Sandy Hook School shooting in 2012, the 20-year old shooter was diagnosed with Asperger’s Syndrome at age 13.

Did autism cause him to fatally shoot 20 children and 6 adult staff members?

No, it did not.

According to an article from Interactive Autism Network at Kennedy Krieger Institute,

“People with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) may have characteristics that could make them both more likely, and less likely, to break the law. On the one hand, they may have trouble with aggression, controlling strong emotions, and understanding other people’s perspectives. They may have challenging behaviors that could attract police attention. However, they also tend to find rules helpful, and laws are “simply social rules of a particular type” that they could be expected to follow.”

There are few case studies dealing with high-functioning autism and crime, and those in place are already biased, as the subjects studied were already in prison or a forensic hospital – they already had legal troubles. This indeed elicits a “chicken or the egg” argument, and cannot truly answer whether or not autism is a factor in violence and crimes. Studies would need to consider people throughout a community, not just those in jails, psychiatric hospitals or institutions.

It is my personal experience that most people with autism are good-natured, happy individuals that are focused on the “now” and typically like to follow rules, but are also wired to be who they are, unapologetically. There is no known evidence that autism causes violent criminal behavior.

Victims, Not Aggressors

 

The more likely scenario you will encounter? People with autism tend to be victims of crimes. Children with disabilities are about three times more likely to be the victims of abuse or neglect, and children with autism are bullied more often than other children.

Social and communication deficits may also place people with autism at a disadvantage when questioned by police. They may not be able to tell if an investigator is lying or manipulating them, resulting in potentially making a false confession. Officers that are not trained to recognize autism may also interpret lack of eye contact, vague answers are changing the subject as evidence of guilt, but these are typical autistic behaviors.

Impulses and Behavior Response

 

Autism Speaks also tells us that autism itself does not cause challenging behaviors. It is likely, however, that some of the underlying biological processes that result in autism might also result in behaviors that are outside of a person’s control—similar to how the tremors associated with Parkinson’s Disease are brought on by impulses that the person cannot direct. In addition, some behavioral responses are simply reflexes—no more of a choice than when your leg jerks upward when the doctor uses his hammer on your kneecap.

Autism aggression is less likely to result in violent behavior toward others; most often the automatic response to stressors (like emergencies) are repetitive or ritualistic – and sometimes self-injurious – behaviors that serve the purpose of self-calming.

SOA You Get What You Get

Autism Tips for Emergency Responders: You Get What You Get!

A guest post by Wanda Refaely, ICE4Autism.

SOA You Get What You GetIt’s like my son used to say about the color of the popsicle he got at snack time in preschool: You get what you get! Emergency calls sometimes come in with lots of information, but most of the time they don’t. As a first responder, it’s your job to attend to whatever is thrown at you, with however much, or little, information you’re provided. This is, undoubtedly, one of the greatest challenges in the field.

Picture this: You arrive on the scene of a motor vehicle accident and the driver is unconscious. In the passenger seat is a young adult male rocking back and forth and repeating “cheeseburger, cheeseburger, cheeseburger”. You gently lean your head in and ask, “Are you OK?” The young man continues uninterrupted on his rant. “What’s your name?” you try again. “Cheeseburger” is all you get in response. You reach in and put your hand on the young man’s shoulder to calm him and he responds with a blood curdling scream.

Is the young man hurt? Has he suffered a concussion or brain injury? Can he even hear you? Maybe he doesn’t understand English? Could he be intoxicated, on drugs or is he mentally ill? Or… Maybe he has autism?

The techniques you implement and how you proceed will differ based on the response to each of these questions. In fact, how you assess the young man’s needs and condition may require an adaptation of your usual or customary protocols. But how do you know?

The best way to distinguish autism, as opposed to other possibilities, is through your powers of observation. The ability to recognizing the “signs” associated with autism is essential to responding appropriately. Though different in every person, autism is often characterized by communication differences, social challenges and unique – and often misinterpreted — behaviors.

A person with autism may exhibit repetitious behaviors – such as rocking, arm flapping or bouncing up and down; “echolalia”, the repetition of phrases or words and/or parroting back what someone has said to them; varied communication abilities which may require the use of a communication device; hyper or hypo-sensory responses including sensitivity to light, sound and touch; and an extreme pain threshold which may be unusually high or extraordinarily low. It is important to note, that autism is a spectrum disorder which means that it may be extraordinarily difficult to discern at all in some people while extremely severe in others.

All of this will all present added challenges for you, the first responder.

Getting back to our scenario, looking for the young man’s (and the driver’s) mobile devices and checking for an ICE (in case of emergency) app may be the single most productive action you take in attempting to figure out the young man’s needs. As the public’s reliance on mobile devices for everything from banking to restaurant reviews has blossomed, so has their use for safety purposes. The implementation of Bob Brotchie’s ICE concept – entering In Case of Emergency information in your cellphone — which went viral nearly a decade ago, has been broadly embraced around the world and is now highly prevalent. And, more specifically, the ICE4Autism mobile app, developed specially to address the unique needs of individuals on the autism spectrum is now used by those with autism, their families and caregivers. ICE4Autism can answer many of the pertinent questions that the driver may have been able to answer for you were she conscious: Who is the young man? Does he, in fact, have autism? How old is he? What is his blood type? Does he have any additional medical conditions? Allergies? How do you contact his emergency contacts? Are there any special instructions related to his care that would be helpful?

Proceeding with the young man’s care based on the valuable information gleaned from the ICE4Autism app is, obviously, preferred to proceeding “blindly”; but, you don’t get to choose – you get what you get.

You may need to move forward based on your observational assumption that the young man in our scenario IS on the autism spectrum. If so, turning OFF lights and sirens, for example, can dramatically reduce stress levels. Looking for and giving the young man what might be a “preferred item” may reduce his anxiety and thereby also improve his ability to respond and cooperate. Speaking in short, direct language and allowing extra time for him to respond will likely yield better results. And limiting physical contact to only the most essential preceded by an explanation of what you are about to do and what to expect are all good ideas.

Responding to a call involving a person with autism isn’t going to be a rare and unusual occurrence. The fact is that autism is the single fastest growing developmental disability in the United States today AND people on the spectrum are seven times more likely to interact with first responders. Being ready and knowing how to respond properly and safely to the unique needs and sensitivities of people with autism is now an essential part of the first responder job description because when the call comes in, you get what you get!

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About Wanda Refaely

Wanda Refaely is passionate about and deeply committed to reducing the barriers to needs-conscious emergency and general care and treatment for individuals with an autism spectrum disorder. She is the founder of ICE4Autism, the ONLY autism-specific in case of emergency mobile app, and is an active contributor to the autism safety and emergency preparedness arena. Wanda’s involvement in the autism community began with her participation in the advocacy and lobbying efforts leading to the passage California’s autism insurance reform law (SB946). She continues to work as an independent consultant specializing in assisting autism treatment providers with their insurance contracting, credentialing and clinical audit needs. Wanda also volunteers as a board and executive committee member at Include Autism, a San Diego autism inclusion and education non-profit. She is a proud mom whose son has been, and continues to be, her inspiration, motivation and her greatest source of joy.

More information:

On the web: www.ICE4Autism.com

On the App Store: https://itunes.apple.com/app/ice4autism/id969601780?mt=8

Via email: wanda@ICE4Autism.com

On Twitter: @ICE4Autism

On Facebook: ICE4Autism Mobile App

Autism and Temperature Regulation

Autism Tips for Emergency Responders: Temperature Regulation

Autism and Temperature RegulationIt often takes an Act of Congress to get my son to wear a coat in the winter. I used to think it was stubbornness or laziness that drove him to his refusal. Eventually I started to realize that he simply doesn’t feel the cold.

How can that be, when the thermometer says it’s freezing outside? Sure, most of you know we live in Atlanta, so you think the point is moot, but I assure you it gets cold here. We even upon occasion get some (gasp!) snow! Like the time the entire state shut down from a mere inch or two, but I digress…

Atlanta One Inch of Snow

What’s really going on is another part of the sensory processing challenges present in individuals with autism – temperature regulation. Many people with an ASD are unable to set their internal thermometer at a comfort zone and can feel hot all the time even in cold weather or cold all the time even when it is warm. As their nervous system is on high alert and blood leaves the extremities to deliver oxygen to internal organs and muscles, many suffer poor circulation and their hands and feet are always cold.

I found out this summer that it can work both ways. I always believed that not feeling cold simply meant that my son overly warm most of the time (as evidenced by his insistence on stripping down to his boxer briefs the second we come home from an event or outing). Unfortunately, his body is unable to regulate cold AND heat, which also means that he can’t feel that he’s getting dangerously sunburned or that he’s on the verge of dehydration or even heat exhaustion.

Some children with autism have anhidrosis, which is the inability to sweat. Parents and caregivers need to take special precautions to prevent a heat emergency in these cases, such as spraying the child’s skin with water when outside, doubling up on fluids, and careful monitoring of the child’s internal temperature.

The Science Behind Temperature Regulation Issues

Research states that there is a noticeable size difference in the hypothalamus between neurotypical and ASD children. The hypothalamus is an integral part of the interoceptive sense and regulates:

  • The release of 8 major hormones by the pituitary gland
  • Body temperature
  • Food and water intake, hunger and thirst
  • Sexual behavior and reproduction
  • Daily cycles in physiological state and behavior also known as circadian rhythm
  • Mediation of emotional responses

Thermoregulation difficulties often accompany Asperger’s, SPD, Autism, ADHD, and Sensory Processing Disorders. Effective behavioral control of temperature depends on both an intact sensory-motor system and an ability to communicate perceptions.

As you respond to calls related to weather or environmental emergencies, keep in mind that your patient (or witness or perpetrator) may not experience temperatures the same way you do.

image courtesy of freedigitalphotos.net

Weekly Autism Tips for Emergency Responders: Co-existing Conditions

image courtesy of freedigitalphotos.net

image courtesy of freedigitalphotos.net

Children with an autism diagnosis often have more concurrent medical and psychological or mental health conditions than their non-autistic counterparts. Because of this, they are also more likely to use EMS and healthcare services.

Learning to recognize the signs and behaviors of autism in a patient can be challenging enough; adding medical complications to the mix can further complicate the call. Approximately one third of patients with an Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) have seizures.

According to a guest post on AutismSpeaks.org by epidemiologist Laura Schieve, Ph.D., at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, her study concluded that children with autism, ADHD or other developmental delays were:

  • 8 times more likely than children without developmental disabilities to have ever had an asthma diagnosis,

    6 times more likely to have had eczema or a skin allergy during the past year,

    8 times more likely to have had a food allergy during the past year,

    2 times more likely to have had frequent severe headaches or migraines during the past year, and

    5 times more likely to have had frequent diarrhea or colitis during the past year.

    Children with autism were twice as likely as children with ADHD or other delays to have had frequent diarrhea or colitis during the past year and were seven times more likely to have experienced these gastrointestinal problems than were children without any developmental disability.

Other co-existing conditions commonly found with autism are tic disorders, like Tourette Syndrome, Attention-deficit-hyperactivity-disorder (ADHD), Obsessive/compulsive disorder (OCD), sleep disorders and mood disorders.

Obesity is another common issue, mostly due to poor trunk development, picky eating habits and decreased physical activity.

Medications, Pain Management and Field Impression

When in the field, be aware that standard dosages of medication for pain control may be ineffective for patients with autism. Be careful when relying on “outcome-based” pain management, as higher dosing may result in unintentional overdose.

Your patient with autism may also exhibit uncommon side effects or adverse reactions to routine drugs, and they may be on uncommon medications that may have interaction with drugs given in the pre-hospital setting.

Remember that it is not your job to diagnose an autism spectrum disorder or try to differentiate it from other conditions. The goal of learning to identify autism is solely to form a working impression that will help you use more appropriate assessment and treatment strategies. As always, you should treat the patient, not the diagnosis.

You should also always consider that there is a medical reason for the behavior, as stroke, brain injury, seizures and hypoglycemia may present with similar signs and behaviors. DO NOT IGNORE LIFE-THREATS just because your patient has autism or you suspect they do.

image courtesy of exciteddelirium.org

Weekly Autism Tips for Emergency Responders: Excited Delirium or Sensory Meltdown?

image courtesy of exciteddelirium.org

image courtesy of exciteddelirium.org

During my last Autism training class for law enforcement, someone brought up an excellent question immediately following the Sensory Meltdown section of my program. They commented that many of the signs and behaviors of sensory overwhelm that lead to a meltdown sound exactly like those of Excited Delirium (ExDS) and wanted to know how to tell the difference.

I absolutely LOVE getting tough questions during my training programs! It’s because of everyone’s valuable input that this training remains fluid and continually improves after each experience.

I have been researching ExDS extensively and, while sharing some signs of sensory processing issues, the outcome is very different. Michael Curtis, MD, who created a field guide to help EMS and Law Enforcement recognize ExDS, refers to the condition as a “freight train to death.”

Excited Delirium typically accompanies the use of stimulants, most commonly but not limited to cocaine and methamphetamines, as these drugs block the re-uptake of dopamine, resulting in elevation of dopamine levels in the brain. This is amplified if the person already has a pre-existing psychiatric condition that is treated with dopamine re-uptake inhibitors.

According to the JEMS website, elevated levels of dopamine cause agitation, paranoia and violent behavior. Heart rate, respiration and temperature control are also affected by dopamine levels, with elevation resulting in tachycardia, tachypnea and hyperthermia. For this reason, hyperthermia is a hallmark of excited delirium.

Look for persons partially clothed or naked, exhibiting violent, almost primal behaviors. They may appear to have “super human” strength, but in actuality merely it’s the loss of pain receptors that creates the illusion.

Excited Delirium is a MEDICAL condition, with a grim outcome once a person enters arrest. The best way to manage it is to prevent cardiac arrest. Prehospital therapy should focus on treating the increased metabolic activity and hyperthermia first.

The mnemonic “NOT A CRIME,” developed by Michael Curtis, MD, clearly sets out the signs and symptoms of ExDS:

  • N – Patient is naked and sweating from hyperthermia
  • O – Patient exhibits violence against objects, especially glass
  • T – Patient is tough and unstoppable, with superhuman strength and insensitivity to pain
  • A – Onset is acute
  • C – Patient is confused regarding time, place, purpose and perception
  • R – Patient is resistant and won’t follow commands to desist
  • I – Patient’s speech is incoherent, often with loud shouting and bizarre content
  • M – Patient exhibits mental health conditions or makes you feel uncomfortable
  • E – EMS should request early backup and rapid transport to the ED

Sensory Processing Meltdown

A sensory meltdown is when a person’s nervous system has been so bombarded by sensory input that it enters survival mode, perceiving that it is under attack. These may occur in autistic adults just as much as children.

An adult experiencing a meltdown describes the experience on SPDSupport.org:

“All sensory systems start firing! Everything pierces you like a knife! Every sound, every speck of light, every texture against your skin, and everything you can smell. It surrounds you and cuts right into you. Trapped within your skin, like a caged animal under attack, you are basically helpless. You thrash, you heave, you scream, you do whatever you can, because you are perceiving something killing you. You need to escape! Everything is hurting you, things that no one else can even believe would be affecting you. The smallest noise makes you want to claw your ears off, the slightest movement of you head might make you sick, and even the dimmest lights in the room make your eyes feel like they are bleeding.

Nothing matters anymore. You only have a few options: fight, flight, or freeze.”

Not unlike ExDS, some of these signs may present as agitation, violent behavior, resisting, tachycardia and tachypnea. If your nervous system believes you are in imminent danger, it will employ survival techniques.

There is typically no hyperthermia involved with a sensory meltdown. Additionally, once you reduce sensory triggers or remove a person from the environment, the meltdown begins to lessen. The person may begin to self-calm and use relaxation techniques in order to return to their baseline behavior.

It is always best to try and prevent meltdowns by learning to recognize the signs and behaviors leading up to them. If that cannot be achieved you want to immediately remove harmful stimuli and reduce sensory triggers. Once their nervous system begins to stabilize, you can then add positive stimuli. Tools such as deep breathing, gum chewing, handling a fidget item, redirection and distraction can all help the nervous system relax and block the stressors. It is only then that you can gain compliance or begin communicating.

SPD meltdowns are incredibly intense and often traumatic for the individual experiencing them. However, unlike ExDS, the person is aware of the way they acted during, even though they were not in control of their behaviors. There is no blackout or acute altered mental status. It is essentially a response to a nervous system overwhelm and will eventually subside. The goal is to keep the person safe and do whatever you can to reduce sensory triggers.

Recognizing a sensory meltdown is extremely helpful, but as always, DO NOT IGNORE LIFE-THREATS such as stroke, brain injury, seizures or hypoglycemia just because your patient has autism or you suspect they do.

Have you responded to a call involving excited delirium or a sensory meltdown? What were your indicators? How was it handled? Share your thoughts below or send me a confidential email with your comments! Input from the field is ALWAYS valued.