Medic On The Mic
Paramedic-educator Sara Moore joins Medic on the Mic for one of our most heartfelt conversations yet—on autism, neurodivergence, and truly people-first care in EMS. From the school incident that ignited her advocacy to field-tested de-escalation tools (sensory kits, visual priming, and rapport-building through hyperfocus), this episode gives leaders, educators, and street-level providers practical steps they can implement today. What you’ll learn * How “people first, diagnosis second” changes outcomes * Building a low-cost sensory kit (fidgets, chew tool, noise-canceling headphones, whiteboard/markers, PECs board, simple coloring items) * Visual priming: photos of the stretcher, rig interior, ambulance bay, and patient rooms to reduce anxiety before transitions * Using hyperfocus/info-dumping to build rapport quickly * The “blue envelope” idea for disclosure—and Sara’s EMS-specific version in development * Why so many EMS pros may be neurodivergent—and what that means for training and wellness Power takeaway: “Treat the person before the diagnosis.” Timestamps 00:00 Intro & why this episode matters 02:00 Meet Sara (paramedic, educator, mom) 06:00 The handcuff incident—and what it changed 16:00 Autism traits & communication differences 24:00 Visual priming to ease transitions 29:00 What’s in a field-ready sensory kit 33:00 Applying these tools to dementia, kids, and panic attacks 34:30 Why EMS attracts neurodivergent minds 47:00 ‘Blue envelope’ for EMS—what’s next 50:00 One-sentence takeaway: people first Connect with Sara • LinkedIn: search “Sarah Moore Groover” • Email: SaraMoore2213@gmail.com Host: Brandon Heggie | Medic on the Mic Questions or feedback? Message us—your notes may shape a future episode. Keywords: EMS, Autism, Neurodiversity, De-escalation, First Responders, Education, Inclusion Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2520552/support]
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