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Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

These are the questions that are most frequently asked by families starting services. 

What will sessions look like? 

Sessions are play-based, tailored to your child, and wonderfully fun! We will join in with your child's loves and help them develop their ideas, explain their reasoning, and increase connection. We often work on specific skills such as language acquisition, executive functions, flexibility, and social skills. Sessions are a mix of play, skill-building, peer play, scaffolding of school skills, regulation techniques and reflection. 

Will therapy take place at home, school or the community? 

We provide naturalized services that are tailored to each child and family's needs. We help children connect with important people and places in their world while increasing skill generalization. We create programs for home, preschool or school, and the community. We push into environments that will best serve your child's needs. 

How can I be involved in my child's program? 

There are many wonderful ways to be a part of your child's therapy. We hold regular check ins and meetings and keep your child and family's voices as in integral part of your child's program. We often support and/or train on regulatory plans, play development, routines, and positive behavior strategies. During home sessions, parents often take part in the fun. Through play, time ins, making sweet spaces for your child, and sharing your values and ideas, your input and participation are key.

Do you network with insurance providers? 

We are a private-pay and out-of-network provider. Each month, we will provide you with a superbill containing the necessary codes for insurance reimbursement. We will help you ask your insurance provider important questions to set up the therapy process for success. 

Which diagnoses does insurance reimburse for?

Currently insurance providers will reimburse services for children with an autism diagnosis. Even though therapy is effective for children with a variety of developmental and sensory needs, autism is currently the only diagnosis that insurance providers recognize for reimbursement. 

What are the most common recommendations you make for home?

Play, play, play. Connect and have fun.; make time and space for time-ins. Make routines predictable, and well-paced. Build new skills when you are well-fed, well-rested and in a good space. Find ways for the whole family to calm and regulate. Ask for help when you need it. Find those juicy spaces where you connect together!

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