Autism Training for Law Enforcement Officers: Perceptions From the Field.

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Bibliographic Details
Title: Autism Training for Law Enforcement Officers: Perceptions From the Field.
Authors: Kenney, Christine K. (AUTHOR), Sreckovic, Melissa A. (AUTHOR), Wallace, Matthew (AUTHOR), Debbaudt, Dennis (AUTHOR)
Source: Journal of Autism & Developmental Disorders. Feb2026, Vol. 56 Issue 2, p819-829. 11p.
Subjects: Police education, Curriculum, Intellect, Qualitative research, Human services programs, Research funding, Autism, Course evaluation (Education), Evaluation of human services programs, Descriptive statistics, Confidence, Thematic analysis, Professional employee training, Research, Asperger's syndrome
Geographic Terms: United States
Abstract: Autistic individuals and law enforcement officers are likely to engage under various circumstances within the community. Therefore, law enforcement officers require training on supporting those with autism and better understanding autistic behaviors. Aims for this study include: (1) developing and delivering high quality professional development on autism spectrum disorder (ASD) to support autistic individuals during encounters with law enforcement officers, and (2) examining how law enforcement officers respond to the professional development session. For this study a four-hour, in-person training on autism for law enforcement officers was developed. Law enforcement officers (n = 27) attended the training session. Subsequently, participants completed an open-ended survey gathering perceptions related to the topics covered in the training, thoughts on the feasibility and applicability of content, and transfer to future safety encounters involving autistic individuals. Data was analyzed using a qualitative approach including concept driven thematic coding with constant comparisons. Data yielded themes on experiences with the autistic community, strategies learned from the training, thoughts on specific content, and feedback on the training format. Overall, law enforcement officers reported they felt better prepared, more knowledgeable on the autistic community, and believed the strategies were feasible and applicable to the field. These findings point to the importance of training on autism and that law enforcement officers found it was time well spent. Future directions include examining how training transfers to practice in the field and ways to connect law enforcement officers with the autistic community outside of emergency response. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Database: Psychology and Behavioral Sciences Collection
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