Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder
Evidence-Based Therapy Planning for Young Children with FASD
An evidence-based FASD plan is multidisciplinary and profile-led: speech-language therapy, occupational therapy for sensory and motor needs, executive-function and behavioural scaffolding, caregiver coaching and comorbidity surveillance — aiming for functional independence, with assessment and AbilityScore established only at a Pinnacle centre.
A child with FASD does not need fixing — they need a precisely scaffolded environment that turns their profile into progress.
In short
An evidence-based plan for a young child with Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder (ICD-11 LD2F.00) is multidisciplinary, individualised and strengths-anchored — built around the child's specific neurodevelopmental profile rather than a generic delay protocol. Core elements include early developmental and speech-language intervention, occupational therapy for sensory and self-regulation needs, structured behavioural support, executive-function and adaptive-skills scaffolding, and active caregiver coaching. The aim is functional independence and protection against secondary difficulties, not a single "cure".The science and the components
FASD produces a heterogeneous profile — variable cognition, language, motor coordination, attention, executive function, sensory processing and adaptive behaviour — so assessment-led targeting is essential. Evidence-supported components typically include:- Speech-language therapy — receptive/expressive language, social communication and pragmatic skills.
- Occupational therapy — sensory modulation, motor coordination, self-care routines.
- Behavioural and executive-function support — antecedent-based strategies, visual structure, predictable routines, and explicit teaching of self-regulation; FASD-informed approaches favour environmental accommodation over consequence-heavy models.
- Caregiver-mediated intervention — coaching families in consistency, externalised structure and advocacy.
- Surveillance for comorbidity — ADHD, sleep, feeding and learning difficulties warrant coordinated review.
A "try differently, not harder" reframe — adapting demands to the child's neurology — underpins current best practice.
The Pinnacle way
A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care — never from an app or form. From that structured baseline we sequence cross-domain goals and co-therapy. Explore Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder, our occupational therapy pathway, and how the AbilityScore is established.Trusted sources
WHO ICD-11 (LD2F.00); CDC guidance on fetal alcohol spectrum disorders; AAP developmental-disability management principles.Next step — Partner with a Pinnacle clinical team to convert a child's FASD profile into a sequenced, measurable plan — begin with an assessment.
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
Watch for attention and executive-function difficulties, sensory dysregulation, language gaps, motor coordination issues, sleep and feeding concerns, and emerging behavioural distress that signals an environment mismatch.
Try this at home
Externalise structure: use visual schedules, predictable routines and short, concrete instructions. With FASD, adapting the environment to the child usually works better than increasing demands.
Trusted sources
Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10
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
Is there a single therapy that treats FASD?
No. FASD requires a coordinated, multidisciplinary plan tailored to the child's profile — combining speech-language therapy, occupational therapy, behavioural and executive-function support, and caregiver coaching — rather than any one intervention.
Why does FASD intervention favour environmental accommodation?
Because the underlying difficulties are neurodevelopmental, FASD-informed practice adapts demands, routines and supports to the child's neurology rather than relying on consequence-heavy behavioural models — the 'try differently, not harder' principle.
How is the starting point established?
Through a clinician-administered structured assessment at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, which establishes a clinical AbilityScore® baseline and informs goal sequencing. Diagnosis and the score are never self-calculated.