Autism Labs

Autism Labs

Part 3 What I Learned as an Autism Parent About Respite Care, Staff Culture and Letting Go of Fear

22 min · 27 de abr de 2026
portada del episodio Part 3 What I Learned as an Autism Parent About Respite Care, Staff Culture and Letting Go of Fear

Descripción

This episode focuses on lessons learned from building and running a special needs program, emphasizing that strong outcomes depend less on daily tasks and more on culture, trust, and communication. Mike Carr and Johnna Oppermann discuss how fear often drives parenting decisions and can unintentionally lead to over-control, enabling behaviors, or breakdowns in communication between parents and staff. They highlight the importance of creating a supportive environment where staff feel valued, since staff well-being directly impacts the quality of care provided. The conversation stresses the need to celebrate progress regularly, address concerns quickly using direct communication rather than texts or emails, and avoid allowing frustrations to build up. They also explore how modern care settings require collaboration rather than “us vs. them” dynamics, and how individuals in programs must be supported through appropriate challenge, real-world exposure, and individualized expectations. Ultimately, the episode underscores that sustainable programs are built on trust, transparency, and strong leadership, where parents and professionals work together while allowing trained leaders to guide day-to-day operations for long-term success.  If you're interested in joining our private Facebook community for parents and caregivers seeking residential options, guidance and peer support for profoundly autistic adults or adults with complex needs - click here! [https://www.facebook.com/share/g/1Bis7FizDW/ ]

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58 episodios

episode Autism Respite Care: 7 Ways to Find Real Help artwork

Autism Respite Care: 7 Ways to Find Real Help

In this episode of Autism Labs, Mike Carr shares personal lessons learned from more than 30 years of raising his profoundly autistic, nonverbal son Michael and discusses one of the greatest challenges families face: finding reliable caregivers for individuals with high support needs autism. He explains that while family members often help early on, trained and dependable support becomes essential as children grow older and behaviors become more complex. Mike emphasizes that the best caregivers are often patient, flexible, teachable, and compassionate rather than simply highly credentialed. He outlines seven practical ways families can build a strong caregiving team, including using respite resources, connecting with climbing communities, partnering with other parents, recruiting special education aides, exploring faith-based disability ministries, working with universities, and improving job postings with more professional titles. Throughout the episode, he encourages families to build a full “bench” of caregivers instead of relying on one person and reminds listeners that although the process can be exhausting, trustworthy and caring helpers do exist, and families do not have to navigate the journey alone.  If you're interested in joining our private Facebook community for parents and caregivers seeking residential options, guidance and peer support for profoundly autistic adults or adults with complex needs - Click Here!  [https://www.facebook.com/share/g/1Bis7FizDW/ ]

25 de may de 20269 min
episode Part 2 AI For Autism Care and Smart Home Safety for IDD Families artwork

Part 2 AI For Autism Care and Smart Home Safety for IDD Families

This episode explores how practical, accessible technology can transform the home environment for individuals with special needs by improving safety, increasing independence, and enriching daily life. Mike Courtney outlines a simple but powerful framework, evaluating each room for safety risks, everyday challenges, and opportunities for enrichment, while leveraging a growing database of thousands of real-world solutions, from smart home devices to best practices. AI plays a central role by continuously updating options and recommending personalized solutions, helping families discover tools they may not have known existed.  The conversation emphasizes balancing independence with safety through technology that acts as a “second set of eyes,” while also addressing the realities of limited funding and the need to maximize impact and efficiency. Looking ahead, advancements in robotics, data-driven dashboards, and community-driven collaboration promise to further enhance care, with a future vision of scalable home assessment and support services. The key message is clear: rather than fearing emerging technologies, families and caregivers should embrace them as powerful tools to create safer, more independent, and more fulfilling lives.  If you're interested in joining our private Facebook community for parents and caregivers seeking residential options, guidance and peer support for profoundly autistic adults or adults with complex needs - click here!  [https://www.facebook.com/share/g/1Bis7FizDW/%20]

18 de may de 202620 min
episode Part 1 AI for Autism Care: Daily Living Labs for Parents artwork

Part 1 AI for Autism Care: Daily Living Labs for Parents

In this episode of Autism Labs, Mike Carr speaks with futurist and researcher Mike Courtney about how AI and emerging technologies can be applied in practical, meaningful ways to support individuals with complex special needs. The discussion centers on redefining technology as the application of knowledge to solve everyday human challenges, not just advanced digital tools, and introduces the concept of “Daily Living Labs,” a community-driven approach focused on improving activities of daily living such as communication, hygiene, and independence.  The conversation highlights how caregivers, professionals, and technologists can collaborate to both identify existing solutions and create new ones using simple tools like smartphones, AI-generated learning videos, and non-wearable sensors that track sleep and physiological signals. These technologies can help build personalized learning systems, improve skill development, and provide deeper insights into behavior by identifying patterns tied to sleep, environment, and emotional triggers. Ultimately, the episode emphasizes a future where continuous, passive data collection and AI-driven insights support proactive care, enabling smarter daily planning, better outcomes, and a connected ecosystem where families don’t have to solve challenges alone.  If you're interested in joining our private Facebook community for parents and caregivers seeking residential options, guidance and peer support for profoundly autistic adults or adults with complex needs - click here!  [https://www.facebook.com/share/g/1Bis7FizDW/ ]

11 de may de 202619 min
episode Part 3 What I Learned as an Autism Parent About Respite Care, Staff Culture and Letting Go of Fear artwork

Part 3 What I Learned as an Autism Parent About Respite Care, Staff Culture and Letting Go of Fear

This episode focuses on lessons learned from building and running a special needs program, emphasizing that strong outcomes depend less on daily tasks and more on culture, trust, and communication. Mike Carr and Johnna Oppermann discuss how fear often drives parenting decisions and can unintentionally lead to over-control, enabling behaviors, or breakdowns in communication between parents and staff. They highlight the importance of creating a supportive environment where staff feel valued, since staff well-being directly impacts the quality of care provided. The conversation stresses the need to celebrate progress regularly, address concerns quickly using direct communication rather than texts or emails, and avoid allowing frustrations to build up. They also explore how modern care settings require collaboration rather than “us vs. them” dynamics, and how individuals in programs must be supported through appropriate challenge, real-world exposure, and individualized expectations. Ultimately, the episode underscores that sustainable programs are built on trust, transparency, and strong leadership, where parents and professionals work together while allowing trained leaders to guide day-to-day operations for long-term success.  If you're interested in joining our private Facebook community for parents and caregivers seeking residential options, guidance and peer support for profoundly autistic adults or adults with complex needs - click here! [https://www.facebook.com/share/g/1Bis7FizDW/ ]

27 de abr de 202622 min
episode Part 2 Why Culture is the Most Important Thing to Look for in Autism Respite Care artwork

Part 2 Why Culture is the Most Important Thing to Look for in Autism Respite Care

Choosing the right autism program comes down to culture, transparency, and a commitment to long-term success rather than quick fixes. High-quality programs take the time to truly understand each individual through a thorough intake process, including detailed history, observation, and gradual transition planning, rather than rushing enrollment. They build success slowly, creating early wins to avoid failure and prevent participants from being pushed out due to poor fit. Strong programs also prioritize staff consistency and retention, recognizing that a positive, purpose-driven culture—not just pay—directly impacts the quality of care. Flexibility is essential, with staff willing to adapt environments and behaviors to meet individual needs while preserving dignity. Most importantly, these programs foster open communication and partnership with parents, ensuring trust, collaboration, and better outcomes for everyone involved.

20 de abr de 202616 min