Frequently Asked Questions About Autism and ABA Therapy

Clear, Honest Answers to the Questions Families Ask Most

Navigating autism care can feel overwhelming, especially when you’re just starting. We’ve compiled answers to the most common questions families ask us about autism diagnosis, ABA therapy, insurance coverage, and what to expect from our services.

If you don’t see your question answered here, call us at (201) 979-0772 — we’re here to help.

Getting Started & Diagnosis

Q: What are the signs of autism spectrum disorder (ASD)?

Children on the autism spectrum may exhibit a range of signs, including:

 

Communication challenges:

 

  • Delayed speech and language development
  • Difficulty starting or maintaining conversations
  • Repeating words or phrases (echolalia)
  • Not responding to their name by 12 months

 

Social interaction difficulties:

 

  • Avoiding eye contact
  • Difficulty understanding emotions or facial expressions
  • Preferring to play alone
  • Not showing interest in sharing experiences with others

 

Repetitive behaviors and routines:

 

  • Repetitive movements (hand-flapping, rocking, spinning)
  • Insistence on sameness or routines
  • Intense focus on specific interests
  • Sensitivity to sensory input (lights, sounds, textures, tastes)

 

Important: Autism presents differently in every child. Some children show many of these signs; others show only a few. If you have concerns about your child’s development, trust your instincts and seek an evaluation.

Step 1: Talk to your pediatrician about your concerns. Bring specific examples of behaviors that worry you.

 

Step 2: Request a developmental screening. Pediatricians can conduct brief screenings (like the M-CHAT) during well-child visits.

 

Step 3: Seek a comprehensive diagnostic evaluation if screening suggests autism. We offer ADOS-2 and ADI-R evaluations at our New Jersey and North Carolina locations.

 

Step 4: Connect with early intervention services immediately (even before diagnosis is finalized). Early intervention leads to better long-term outcomes.

 

You’re not overreacting. Early identification and intervention make a significant difference in your child’s development.

A comprehensive autism evaluation typically includes:

 

Clinical interview: A psychologist talks with you about your child’s developmental history, behaviors, and current challenges.

 

Direct observation: The psychologist observes your child in structured and unstructured activities to assess social communication and behavior.

 

Standardized assessments:

 

  • ADOS-2 (Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule) — gold-standard observational assessment
  • ADI-R (Autism Diagnostic Interview-Revised) — detailed parent interview
  • Cognitive and developmental testing

 

Duration: 2-4 hours, often split across multiple sessions

 

Results: Comprehensive diagnostic report typically provided within 2-3 weeks, including diagnosis (if applicable), recommendations for services, and next steps.

Children’s Specialized ABA offers diagnostic evaluations at:

 

  • New Jersey locations (all 6 centers)
  • North Carolina (Greensboro)

 

Evaluations are conducted by licensed psychologists with specialized training in autism assessment.

 

You can also seek evaluations from:

 

  • Developmental pediatricians
  • University-based autism clinics
  • Children’s hospitals with autism specialty programs

 

Timeline: We typically schedule evaluations within 2-3 weeks of initial contact and provide results within 2-3 weeks of completed assessment.

With Children’s Specialized ABA: Most families go from first contact to first therapy session in 5-6 weeks.

 

Timeline breakdown:

 

  • Week 1: Initial contact, insurance verification, assessment scheduled
  • Week 2-3: Comprehensive assessment
  • Week 3-5: Insurance authorization (we handle all paperwork)
  • Week 5-6: Services begin

 

The main variable is insurance authorization (typically 2-3 weeks once we submit documentation).

We do NOT have 6-month waitlists that many families report with other providers.

ABA Therapy

Q: What is ABA therapy?

Applied Behavior Analysis (ABA) is a scientifically validated approach to understanding and changing behavior. ABA therapy teaches children with autism new skills and reduces challenging behaviors by breaking down complex skills into small, teachable steps.

 

What ABA addresses:

 

  • Communication and language
  • Social interaction and peer relationships
  • Daily living skills (self-care, routines, independence)
  • Academic and pre-academic skills
  • Play and leisure skills
  • Behavior challenges (tantrums, aggression, self-injury)

 

Our approach: We use naturalistic, play-based ABA — teaching skills through activities your child enjoys, not rigid drills at a table.

It depends on your child’s age, needs, and goals. Research shows:

 

Early intervention (ages 18mo-5yrs): 20-40 hours per week of intensive ABA produces the best outcomes

 

School-age children: 10-25 hours per week may be appropriate depending on needs

 

Maintenance phase: 5-10 hours per week as skills develop and therapy fades

 

Your child’s BCBA will recommend hours based on comprehensive assessment. Insurance typically authorizes 10-40 hours per week depending on medical necessity.

ABA therapy isn’t a quick fix — it’s an investment in long-term development.

 

Typical duration: Most children receive intensive ABA therapy for 1-3 years, though some need more or less depending on their starting point and rate of progress.

 

The goal: Building independence so your child needs less support over time. Many families gradually reduce therapy hours as skills develop and eventually transition to periodic consultation or parent coaching.

No. ABA therapy teaches skills — it doesn’t change who your child is fundamentally.

 

We’re not trying to make autistic children “act neurotypical.” We’re teaching:

 

  • Communication so your child can express their needs
  • Social skills so they can connect with others on their own terms
  • Daily living skills so they can be as independent as possible

 

Your child’s interests, preferences, and personality stay intact. We build on their strengths and support their development in ways that honor who they are.

No — they address different aspects of development, but they work best when coordinated.

 

ABA therapy: Focuses on behavior change, skill acquisition across all developmental domains (communication, social, self-care, academic)

 

Speech-Language Therapy: Focuses specifically on communication — articulation, language comprehension, social communication, AAC devices

 

Occupational Therapy: Focuses on sensory processing, fine motor skills, daily living tasks (feeding, dressing, toileting)

 

At Children’s Specialized ABA: These services are coordinated by one team with shared goals — not separate providers you have to coordinate across three different offices.

Yes — parent training is built into every ABA program, not an optional add-on.

 

For center-based families: Regular parent training sessions where your child’s BCBA teaches you the strategies they’re using in therapy. You can also observe sessions through one-way glass.

 

For in-home families: Parent coaching happens in real-time during every session. You’re not watching — you’re learning and practicing alongside your child.

 

Why parent training matters: Research consistently shows that parent involvement significantly improves outcomes. Skills your child learns in therapy must transfer to home and community — and you’re the key to making that happen.

ABA therapy is highly effective for children with limited verbal communication. We work on developing communication through:

 

  • Teaching first words and expanding language
  • Sign language or picture exchange systems (PECS)
  • AAC devices (speech-generating devices like Proloquo2Go, TouchChat)
  • Gestures and functional communication training

 

Our speech-language pathologists work alongside BCBAs to develop the most effective communication approach for your child — whether that’s verbal speech, AAC, or a combination.

 

The goal isn’t forcing verbal communication. The goal is giving your child a reliable way to communicate their needs, wants, and thoughts.

We hear this often — and it’s a valid concern.

 

Not all ABA is the same. Traditional “table-based” ABA with rigid drills can feel robotic and disconnected from real life. That’s not our approach.

 

We use naturalistic, play-based ABA — teaching skills through activities your child enjoys, in environments that feel natural (whether at our centers or in your home). We focus on functional skills that matter for daily life, not arbitrary benchmarks.

 

And critically, we involve you as a partner. You’re not dropping your child off and hoping something works. You’re learning strategies, practicing at home, and seeing how skills develop in natural routines.

 

If previous ABA felt like “doing something to your child,” ours should feel like “working alongside your child and family.”

Our Services

Q: What makes Children's Specialized ABA different from other providers?

We’re the only autism care provider in New Jersey with a direct partnership to RWJBarnabas Health — the state’s largest healthcare system.

 

That partnership gives families:

 

  1. Priority specialist access: When your child needs services beyond ABA (nutrition, psychology, medical consultation), we coordinate directly with RWJBarnabas Health specialists through our “Together Line.” No referral lists. Direct access.
  2. Hospital-grade quality oversight: Our Quality Committee includes hospital physicians, psychologists, and administrators who review clinical outcomes quarterly. Institutional accountability you won’t get from independent providers.
  3. Comprehensive services: ABA, speech, OT, social work, family support, and diagnostic evaluations — all coordinated by one team under one roof.

 

Most ABA providers offer therapy in isolation. We provide a complete care system.

We provide comprehensive autism care including:

 

  • ABA Therapy (center-based and in-home)
  • Speech-Language Therapy (integrated with ABA goals)
  • Occupational Therapy (sensory, motor, daily living skills)
  • Social Work Support (insurance navigation, IEP advocacy, family counseling)
  • Family Faculty Mentorship (parent-to-parent support)
  • Diagnostic Evaluations (ADOS-2, ADI-R for children 18mo-10yrs — available in NJ and NC)

 

One team. One treatment plan. One place — instead of juggling five different providers.

18 months through 12 years for most services (ABA, speech, OT, social work).

 

18 months through 10 years for diagnostic evaluations.

Yes. We provide interpreter services to ensure your family receives support in your preferred language.

 

Many of our team members are bilingual, and we can arrange interpretation for:

 

  • Initial consultations
  • Assessment sessions
  • Parent training
  • IEP meetings
  • Ongoing communication

 

Call (201) 979-0772 to request language support.

Insurance & Cost

Q: Does insurance cover ABA therapy?

Most insurance plans provide comprehensive coverage for ABA therapy thanks to autism insurance mandates in New Jersey, Maryland, North Carolina, and Arizona.

 

Many families pay little to no out-of-pocket costs for ABA services.

 

We accept most major plans including:

 

  • Medicaid (all states we serve)
  • Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield
  • Aetna, Cigna, United Healthcare
  • AmeriHealth, Optum
  • And many more

Self-pay rates (if you don’t have insurance coverage):

 

  • Center-based ABA: $70-$120 per hour
  • In-home ABA: $80-$130 per hour

 

For 20 hours per week: $6,400-$10,400 per month without insurance

 

This is why insurance is critical. Autism insurance mandates in our states require insurers to cover ABA therapy, making it accessible to most families.

 

Good news: The vast majority of families have insurance coverage and pay minimal out-of-pocket costs.

We handle appeals on your behalf.

 

If your insurance denies authorization (which is rare for medically necessary ABA services), our insurance team:

 

  1. Reviews the denial reason
  2. Gathers additional clinical documentation
  3. Submits a formal appeal with supporting evidence
  4. Communicates with insurance medical reviewers

 

Most appeals are successful. We don’t give up easily.

It depends on your insurance plan. Some plans require a referral; others don’t.

 

We verify this during your initial contact and help you obtain any required referrals if needed.

Center-Based vs. In-Home

What's the difference between center-based and in-home ABA therapy?

Center-Based ABA:

 

  • Therapy at our facilities in dedicated therapeutic environments
  • Access to specialized sensory equipment
  • Structured peer interaction opportunities
  • On-site integration with speech and occupational therapists
  • Parent observation rooms with one-way glass
  • Full-day, half-day, and after-school program options

 

Best for: Families wanting intensive full-day or half-day programs, peer socialization, specialized equipment, separation between therapy and home.

In-Home ABA:

 

  • Therapy in your natural environment (your kitchen, your child’s bedroom, your backyard)
  • Skills taught in exact context where they’ll be used
  • Built-in parent coaching during every session
  • Flexible scheduling around your family’s routine
  • Community-based teaching (parks, libraries, stores)
  • No commute (especially helpful with younger siblings or tight work schedules)

 

Best for: Families preferring therapy at home, flexible scheduling, parent coaching in real-time, teaching skills in natural contexts.

Yes. Many families use a combination:

 

  • Intensive center sessions 2-3 days per week for skill acquisition
  • In-home sessions 1-2 days per week for generalization and parent training

 

We build the plan around what works for your family. There’s no one-size-fits-all approach.

Yes. Your child’s needs change over time, and service delivery can change too.

 

Some families start with in-home when their child is very young (18-24 months) and transition to center-based as they get older and benefit from peer interaction.

Others start at a center for intensive skill-building and add in-home sessions later for generalization.

 

We’re flexible. The goal is what works best for your child and family at each stage of development.

Daily Life & Family Support

Q: How can I handle my child's outbursts or meltdowns?

Meltdowns are often triggered by sensory overload, communication frustration, or changes in routine. They’re not “bad behavior” — they’re a signal that your child is overwhelmed.

 

ABA therapy helps by:

 

  • Identifying specific triggers through functional behavior assessment
  • Teaching your child alternative ways to communicate needs (instead of melting down)
  • Building coping skills for frustration tolerance
  • Creating environmental supports to prevent meltdowns before they start
  • Training you in de-escalation strategies that actually work

 

Our social workers also provide family counseling to help you manage the stress of challenging behaviors at home.

Yes. Feeding issues are common in autism and often relate to sensory sensitivities, rigidity around food, or oral motor challenges.

 

We address feeding through:

 

  • Occupational therapy: Sensory-based feeding interventions to expand food tolerance
  • ABA therapy: Gradual exposure to new foods using positive reinforcement (not forcing)
  • Coordination with nutritionists: Through our RWJBarnabas Health partnership when medical concerns arise (failure to thrive, nutritional deficiencies)

 

Many families see significant improvements in food variety and mealtime behavior with coordinated OT and ABA support.

Many children with autism develop the skills necessary to live independently as adults. The ability to live independently depends on:

 

  • Individual developmental trajectory
  • Quality and intensity of early intervention
  • Ongoing support and skill-building through adolescence
  • Access to community resources in adulthood

 

ABA therapy, speech therapy, and occupational therapy build the foundation for independence — communication, self-care, problem-solving, daily living skills, vocational skills.

 

While we can’t predict any individual child’s future, we can say that high-quality early intervention significantly improves long-term outcomes.

Whether your child can be left home alone depends on their:

 

  • Safety awareness and judgment
  • Ability to manage basic daily tasks independently
  • Communication skills (can they call for help if needed?)
  • Impulse control and decision-making
  • Understanding of home safety (not opening doors to strangers, kitchen safety, etc.)

 

This develops gradually over time as your child masters prerequisite skills through therapy.

 

We work toward increasing independence at every stage — first brief periods in another room while you’re home, then longer spans, always matched to your child’s readiness.

 

Many families find that by late childhood or adolescence, their child can be home alone for short periods. For others, ongoing supervision remains necessary. It’s highly individual.

Working with Schools

Q: Do you work with schools and attend IEP meetings?

Yes. Our social workers and BCBAs regularly attend IEP meetings with families.

 

We:

  • Provide data and progress reports to school teams
  • Help you understand your rights under IDEA (federal special education law)
  • Advocate for appropriate services and accommodations
  • Coordinate communication between our team and your child’s school
  • Consult on behavior support plans for school settings
  • Help with transitions (early intervention to preschool, preschool to kindergarten, elementary to middle school)

 

Many families tell us that having a professional advocate at IEP meetings is invaluable — especially when schools push back on services or placement.

Yes. Many school-age children receive ABA therapy after school, on weekends, or during school breaks.

 

For younger children not yet in full-time school, families often use:

 

  • Morning ABA sessions + afternoon preschool
  • Alternating days (ABA Mon/Wed/Fri, preschool Tue/Thu)
  • Full-day ABA + evening preschool socialization programs

 

We coordinate with schools to ensure skills learned in ABA therapy transfer to the classroom. Your child’s BCBA can consult with teachers, provide classroom strategies, and help troubleshoot challenges at school.

Choosing a Provider

Q: How do I know if an ABA provider is high-quality?

Look for:

 

  1. BCBA supervision: All treatment plans should be designed and supervised by Board Certified Behavior Analysts, not just implemented by technicians without oversight.
  2. Naturalistic, play-based approach: Therapy should look like play, not rigid drills at a table. Skills should be taught in natural contexts through activities the child enjoys.
  3. Parent training included: You should be learning strategies too, not just dropping your child off. Parent involvement dramatically improves outcomes.
  4. Data-driven decision making: Providers should track progress with objective data and adjust strategies when things aren’t working (not just continuing ineffective interventions for months).
  5. Comprehensive services: Access to speech, OT, and family support — not just ABA in isolation.
  6. Low staff turnover: High turnover disrupts care. Ask about average tenure of therapists.
  7. Institutional backing (if possible): Partnership with a healthcare system or hospital provides accountability and resources independent providers lack.

 

Red flags to avoid:

 

  • Providers who use punishment or aversive techniques
  • Rigid, compliance-focused approaches (“making the child obey”)
  • No parent training component
  • Dismissive of your concerns or input
  • Vague about clinical credentials or supervision structure

About clinical approach:

 

  • What’s your approach to ABA? (Listen for “naturalistic,” “play-based,” “family-centered”)
  • How much parent training do you provide?
  • How do you handle challenging behaviors? (Avoid providers who use punishment or focus on “compliance”)
  • Do you work with other therapists (SLP, OT) or refer out?

 

About qualifications:

 

  • Are treatment plans designed and supervised by BCBAs?
  • What’s your staff turnover rate? (High turnover = disrupted care)
  • What training do your RBTs receive beyond the 40-hour certification course?
  • Do you have quality oversight beyond individual BCBAs?

 

About services:

 

  • Do you offer comprehensive services (speech, OT, social work)?
  • How do you coordinate with schools?
  • Can families choose center-based, in-home, or both?
  • What happens if my child isn’t progressing as expected?

 

About logistics:

 

  • What’s your waitlist? How long until services start?
  • Do you handle insurance authorization or is that on me?
  • What are your cancellation and rescheduling policies?
  • How often will I receive progress updates?

 

Trust your instincts. If a provider feels overly rigid, dismissive of your concerns, or focused on compliance rather than meaningful skills — keep looking.

Still Have Questions?

We’re here to help.

 

If you didn’t find the answer you were looking for, call us at (201) 979-0772 or request an appointment online.

 

Our intake team can answer your specific questions and help you determine if our services are the right fit for your family. No pressure, no sales pitch — just honest conversation about whether we can help.