Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder
What therapy helps a child with Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder?
FASD (ICD-11 LD2F.00) has no single therapy — children benefit most from a coordinated team approach matched to their individual profile, typically blending speech therapy, occupational therapy, behaviour and regulation support, and structured learning help, all wrapped in calm, predictable home and school routines. Early, consistent, individualised support meaningfully improves outcomes.
Your child's brain learns differently because of FASD — and with the right, steady support, they can grow, connect and flourish.
In short
There is no single "FASD therapy" — the most helpful approach is a coordinated team of therapies matched to your child's own profile of strengths and needs. Because Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder (ICD-11 LD2F.00) affects the brain in scattered, individual ways, children usually benefit most from a blend of speech and language therapy, occupational therapy, behaviour and regulation support, and structured learning help — all wrapped in calm, predictable routines at home and school. Early, consistent support genuinely changes outcomes.What therapies help, and why
FASD affects each child differently, so support is built around the difficulties that show up — commonly attention, memory, emotional regulation, sensory processing, language and learning. The therapies that most often help:- Speech and language therapy — for understanding instructions, expressing needs, and social communication, which are frequently affected in FASD.
- Occupational therapy — for sensory regulation, motor coordination, daily-living skills and the self-organisation that many children with FASD find hard.
- Behaviour and regulation support — focused on understanding the why behind behaviour (often a brain-based difficulty, not defiance), teaching calming strategies and supporting parents with practical, compassionate techniques.
- Learning and cognitive support — structured, repetitive, visual teaching that fits how the FASD brain learns; memory and attention scaffolding for school.
- Family coaching — because consistent routines, simple language and a predictable environment are themselves powerful "therapy".
The goal is not to "fix" your child but to remove barriers and build the external structure their brain needs to succeed.
A few things that make support work better
- An early, structured assessment so therapy targets your child's real profile, not guesswork.
- One coordinated plan across therapists, home and school — fragmented help works far less well.
- Looking for and supporting co-occurring difficulties (attention, sleep, learning) rather than treating behaviour alone.
- Patience and repetition — gains are real but built steadily.
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 checklist or an online answer. Our clinicians use a structured, clinician-administered assessment to map your child's individual profile across Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder, then build a coordinated plan that may draw on speech therapy and occupational therapy. With 25 million+ therapy sessions and 4.95 lakh+ families served across 70+ centres, your child is supported by a team, not a single therapist.Trusted sources
WHO ICD-11 classifies FASD under LD2F.00; CDC and AAP guidance describes FASD as a lifelong, brain-based condition best managed through early, individualised, multidisciplinary support and strong family routines; ASHA outlines the role of speech-language therapy in communication and social difficulties.Next step — Book a developmental assessment at your nearest Pinnacle Blooms Network centre to map your child's strengths and start a coordinated therapy plan.
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 how your child copes across home and school with attention, memory, following instructions, emotional regulation, sensory overwhelm and daily routines — difficulties that are consistent and cross-setting are worth a structured developmental assessment.
Try this at home
Keep instructions short, concrete and visual, and use the same predictable daily routine — a steady, calm environment is one of the most powerful supports for a child with FASD.
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
Is there one therapy that treats FASD?
No. FASD affects each child differently, so there is no single treatment. The most effective approach is a coordinated team — commonly speech therapy, occupational therapy, behaviour and regulation support, and structured learning help — tailored to your child's individual profile.
Can therapy cure FASD?
FASD is a lifelong, brain-based condition, so therapy does not cure it. What therapy does well is remove barriers, build skills and provide the structure your child's brain needs — and with early, consistent support, many children make meaningful progress in communication, learning and daily life.
Why do children with FASD struggle with behaviour?
In FASD, difficult behaviour is usually brain-based — driven by problems with attention, memory, sensory processing or emotional regulation — rather than wilful defiance. Understanding the 'why' lets families and therapists respond with calming strategies and predictable routines instead of punishment.
When should we start therapy?
As early as possible. Early, structured support gives the best outcomes. A clinician-led developmental assessment maps your child's strengths and needs so therapy targets what matters most from the start.