Autism Spectrum
District Early Intervention for Autism in Children Under 7
A district programme identifies children under 7 with autism through universal developmental surveillance at anganwadis, immunisation and primary-care contacts, validated tiered screening, a defined referral route to clinicians for diagnosis, and family-centred therapy with periodic review and equity-focused data tracking.
A district that screens early and routes well can change the trajectory of thousands of children — autism support begins with a system, not a single clinic.
In short
A district early intervention programme identifies children under 7 with autism spectrum (ICD-11 6A02) through universal developmental surveillance at every contact point — anganwadis, immunisation visits, and primary health centres — backed by a validated screening tool, a clear referral pathway to qualified clinicians for diagnostic assessment, and family-centred therapy with periodic review. The goal is early, equitable, jurisdiction-wide reach: catch developmental differences as they emerge, confirm with clinicians, and start support without delay.Building the identify-and-support pathway
1. Universal surveillance, not one-off testing. Train frontline workers (ASHA, anganwadi, ANM) and paediatricians to track communication, social and play milestones at every routine contact using CDC-style "Act Early" prompts. Persistent parental concern is itself a referral trigger.2. Tiered screening. Layer a brief validated autism-specific screen onto general developmental screening for toddlers, repeated at intervals rather than once. Screening flags risk — it does not diagnose.
3. Referral and diagnostic confirmation. Establish a defined route from community screen to a multidisciplinary team (paediatrics, speech-language pathology, occupational therapy, clinical psychology) for structured diagnostic assessment, hearing evaluation and developmental profiling.
4. Family-centred early intervention. Connect every confirmed child to naturalistic, play-based therapy — speech therapy, occupational therapy and parent-coaching — with measurable goals and scheduled review. Empower families as co-therapists.
5. Data, equity and governance. Track coverage, time-to-diagnosis and time-to-therapy across blocks so under-served populations are reached, and audit outcomes against a consistent developmental baseline.
The Pinnacle way
A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care — never from a community screen or an app; screening identifies risk, clinicians confirm. As India's largest pediatric developmental-therapy network — 70+ centres across 4 states, 700+ therapists, 4.95 lakh+ families served — Pinnacle partners with government programmes on workforce training, structured assessment and standardised care pathways. Explore Autism Spectrum support, understand the clinician-administered AbilityScore®, and see how early intervention is delivered at scale.Trusted sources
WHO ICD-11 6A02 defines autism spectrum disorder; CDC's "Learn the Signs. Act Early." provides milestone surveillance tools; NICE CG128 sets out recognition and referral standards; the Indian Academy of Pediatrics and NIMHANS offer India-relevant clinical guidance.Next step — Planning or strengthening a district programme? Partner with Pinnacle to train frontline teams and build a screen-to-therapy pathway.
This is general information, not a diagnosis — a clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.
What to watch
Persistent parental concern, limited response to name by 12 months, reduced pointing or showing, delayed or lost words, and strong need for sameness across settings — any of these should trigger referral, not a wait-and-see.
Try this at home
Equip every frontline worker with a simple milestone prompt card and a single referral phone number — the easier it is to act on a concern, the earlier children reach support.
Trusted sources
Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10 · reviewed every 365 days
This is general information, not a diagnosis. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care.
Frequently asked
At what age can autism be reliably identified in a district programme?
Autism-specific features can be reliably flagged in toddlers, and diagnostic assessment is meaningful from around 18–24 months when social-communication and repetitive-behaviour patterns persist across settings. Surveillance should run at every routine contact from infancy so concerns are caught as they emerge, but a confident diagnosis is made by qualified clinicians, not by a community screen.
Who should perform the screening at community level?
Trained frontline workers — ASHA, anganwadi workers and ANMs — alongside primary-care paediatricians can perform brief validated developmental and autism-specific screens. Their role is to identify risk and refer; diagnostic confirmation rests with a multidisciplinary clinical team.
What happens after a child screens positive?
A positive screen triggers a defined referral to a multidisciplinary team for diagnostic assessment, hearing evaluation and developmental profiling. Confirmed children are connected promptly to family-centred early intervention — speech therapy, occupational therapy and parent coaching — with measurable goals and scheduled review.