Stuck on an ABA therapy waitlist in Kansas? Here’s what families in Wichita, Overland Park, and across the state can do right now while they wait.
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You did everything right. Got the diagnosis, tracked down providers, made the calls. And then someone told you there’s a wait. That is genuinely awful news to get, and it’s okay if you’re frustrated.
ABA therapy waitlists in Kansas are a real issue right now, and they’ve been building for a while. There just aren’t enough providers to meet demand, particularly around Wichita and Overland Park. Families sometimes wait weeks, sometimes months. There’s no sugarcoating that.
What we can tell you is that the waiting period doesn’t have to feel like dead time. There’s real, practical work you can do right now, and some of it will matter quite a bit once therapy actually starts.
Kansas isn’t unique in this respect. Autism diagnoses have been rising steadily for the better part of two decades, and the pipeline of trained BCBAs and behavior technicians hasn’t come close to keeping up. Families in and around Wichita and the suburbs have been feeling that crunch pretty hard.
On top of that, insurance authorization runs on its own timeline, separate from whatever waitlist you’re already on. Providers have to get approval before sessions can begin, and that process doesn’t hurry for anyone. Knowing that going in at least helps you plan for it instead of being caught off guard.
If your child is under three, Kansas’s Infant-Toddler Services program is worth looking into right away. It’s not ABA therapy, but it provides early intervention services at no cost to families, and for younger kids especially, that kind of support can make a real difference.
Get in touch with your local tiny-k program as soon as you can. Services end at age three, so the timing really does matter here. Every month counts.
Under federal law, Kansas public schools are required to provide special education services. An autism diagnosis gives you the right to request an evaluation, and if your child qualifies, the district is obligated to put together an Individualized Education Program tailored to their needs.
School services won’t replace ABA therapy, but a solid IEP gives your child meaningful support in the meantime. Speech services, behavioral accommodations, structured routines throughout the day, it adds up. And if you start that process now, something will already be in place by the time ABA begins.
Out of everyone in your child’s life, you’re probably the person who shows up the most consistently. That matters more than most people realize, especially in early development. And while you’re waiting for ABA to start, some of what therapists actually do in sessions is stuff you can try at home.
A predictable daily routine tends to help kids with autism feel more grounded, so that’s usually a good starting point. It doesn’t need to be a strict schedule, just enough structure that your child has some sense of what’s coming next. If transitions are a challenge, picture schedules are worth a try. Some kids take to them right away, others don’t, but there’s nothing to lose by testing it out. Play is probably the most organic way to practice communication and turn-taking, and kids generally have no idea you’re working on anything at all. One thing a lot of parents don’t learn until they’re already in therapy is the importance of timing when it comes to praise. Telling your child they did something well a few minutes after it happened just doesn’t land the same way as catching it in the moment. It feels a little awkward at first, but it becomes second nature. None of this replaces actual therapy, but it’s all built on the same foundations ABA uses, and doing some of that groundwork now isn’t nothing.
Most people don’t realize how much paperwork is involved in starting ABA therapy until they’re in the middle of it. Getting a head start now means you won’t be scrambling when a provider finally has an opening. Pull together your child’s diagnosis report and actually look through your insurance plan to see what it covers for ABA. If your child is on Medicaid, double-check their enrollment status and confirm that ABA is included.
Supportive Care ABA’s intake team can help you work through all of it. It’s worth reaching out even if services are still a ways off, because getting started early gives our team time to handle things on their end so your child can begin without extra delays once a spot opens up.
The wait is hard, especially when every week feels like it matters. But you’re not sitting there with nothing to do. Supportive Care ABA serves families all across Kansas. We come to your home and build therapy around what your child actually needs.
Get in touch and let us know where things stand. The sooner we connect, the sooner we can start working toward the support your child deserves.
Phone: (317) 563-0845
Fax: (317) 936-1241
Email: info@supportivecareaba.com
Visit supportivecareaba.com to contact us or start your intake today.