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8 de abril de 2026
Therapist consistency directly shapes ABA outcomes. Learn how frequent RBT changes slow progress — and how Achieve BT's low turnover protects your child.
8 de abril de 2026
A continuity-of-care policy in ABA therapy is a formal, documented plan that ensures a child's treatment continues without disruption when a therapist leaves, takes leave, or transitions off a case. It includes overlap coverage, data transfer protocols, BCBA-supervised handoffs, and family communication. The BACB Ethics Code (Section 3.14) requires all certified behavior analysts to have a plan in place for both planned and unplanned service interruptions. Without one, children risk regression, behavioral setbacks, and weeks of lost progress. Most ABA parents ask about hours, insurance, and wait times. Few think to ask: what happens to my child's therapy if our therapist leaves? It's a fair question. Industry data puts annual RBT turnover at 65% (BHCOE Accreditation, 2022). That means therapist transitions aren't exceptional — they're routine. The question isn't whether a change will happen. It's whether your provider has a plan when it does. That's exactly what a continuity-of-care policy addresses. What Is a Continuity-of-Care Policy in ABA Therapy? A continuity-of-care policy is a documented set of protocols that governs what happens to a child's ABA therapy when service is interrupted — planned or unplanned. It is not a general promise of good care. It is a written, clinical plan embedded in the service agreement from the start. In practice, a strong continuity-of-care policy in ABA covers: A general plan of action for service interruptions, included in the initial service contract Defined timelines for notifying families when a therapist transition is occurring A structured overlap period — where the departing and incoming therapist work together with the child Transfer of session data, behavioral baselines, and program documentation to the new RBT BCBA oversight during the transition to ensure goal consistency Documentation of all actions taken and outcomes after the interruption It's Not Just Good Practice — It's an Ethical Requirement This isn't optional for accredited ABA providers. The Behavior Analyst Certification Board (BACB) Ethics Code , Section 3.14, requires that behavior analysts "act in the best interests of the client to avoid interruption or disruption of services." It specifically mandates that: Service agreements include a general plan for service interruptions BCBAs make timely efforts to facilitate continuation of services for both planned interruptions (relocation, temporary leave) and unplanned interruptions (illness, funding disruption, emergencies) All actions and outcomes during a service interruption are formally documented Sections 3.15 and 3.16 further govern appropriate discontinuation and transition of services, requiring documented justification and structured transition support in both cases. The BACB also published a dedicated Continuity of Services Toolkit to help providers build these systems. It remains one of the clearest articulations of what compliant, ethical transition planning looks like in clinical practice. What Happens Without One The clinical consequences of an unmanaged therapist transition are well-documented. Research cited by Teamwork and Token Data Lab found that when a child experiences two or more RBT changes in a year, measurable progress drops by over 50%. Skill regression during gaps in service is consistently identified in ABA literature as one of the primary risks of high therapist turnover. A meta-analysis referenced by Praxis Notes found that only 66% of children who start ABA therapy remain after 12 months — and 13% of referred children never start services at all due to disruptions. Lapses don't just delay progress. They actively erode it. For children with autism, where predictability and consistent behavioral support are foundational to progress, an unplanned therapist change with no bridge protocol can trigger: Behavioral regression on previously mastered skills Increased challenging behaviors during the adjustment period A reset of the trust and rapport needed for effective therapy sessions Gaps in BCBA-supervised data collection, weakening the clinical picture What a Strong Continuity-of-Care Policy Actually Looks Like  Here's what parents should expect to see — in writing — from any ABA provider they're evaluating:
A family holds hands while running through a golden field at sunset.
8 de abril de 2026
Learn what therapist tenure means in ABA therapy, why it affects your child's outcomes, and how to use it to compare providers.
A clinician wearing blue gloves holds sticks for a child during a therapy session in an office with colorful wall art.
3 de abril de 2026
What BCBA retention rates tell you about an ABA provider, including turnover, treatment consistency, and questions to ask.
A close-up of a metal alarm clock in the foreground, with a person stretching and yawning in the blurred background.
30 de marzo de 2026
Discover the vital importance of an autism routine for emotional regulation and skill-building. Learn how to create an effective autism activity schedule using ABA strategies.
A person holds a tablet displaying a handwritten to-do list with checked-off tasks and red scribbles, in a workspace.
30 de marzo de 2026
ABA helps kids with autism handle transitions using visual tools, advance warnings & reinforcement. Here's what the research shows.
A person and a young child sit on a blanket, building a vertical tower with small, colorful, interlocking plastic pieces.
30 de marzo de 2026
ABA therapy targets broad behavior and skills. VB therapy zooms in on communication. Here's how they differ — and when to use each.
A smiling adult sits on a sofa, reaching out to a child sitting on the floor in a bright, modern living room.
28 de marzo de 2026
Discover which parenting style is best for autism. Learn why Authoritative parenting, combined with neuro-affirming ABA strategies, leads to the best outcomes for autistic kids.
A teacher assists students with coloring at a table filled with markers and art supplies in a classroom setting.
por Meira Ash 27 de marzo de 2026
Task analysis in ABA therapy breaks big skills into small steps to support learning, independence, and daily progress.
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