Separation Anxiety Disorder
Referring a child with suspected Separation Anxiety Disorder
Refer when separation distress is excessive for the child's developmental age, persists ≥4 weeks (ICD-11 6B05) and impairs function — school refusal, somatic complaints, sleep disruption. First-line is CBT-based psychological therapy; escalate promptly for low mood, self-harm ideation, or a suspected underlying developmental condition.
A clinging child at the school gate is rarely a crisis — but knowing the threshold for onward referral keeps you on the right side of both reassurance and timely intervention.
In short
Developmental-mental-health-trained referral is warranted when separation distress is excessive for the child's developmental age, persists ≥4 weeks, and causes functional impairment — refused schooling, somatic complaints, sleep disruption or family strain. Note an important framing point: Separation Anxiety Disorder is an anxiety disorder, so the evidence-based first line is psychological intervention (CBT-informed therapy) rather than "developmental therapy" in the motor/speech sense. Refer for therapy once distress crosses the impairment threshold — and refer urgently if there are red flags below.When to refer — the decision
- Watchful reassurance — mild, age-typical clinginess (peaks 6–18 months and around early school entry), settling within minutes, no functional impact. Parent guidance and review.
- Refer for structured therapy — distress disproportionate to age, persisting ≥4 weeks (DSM-5 / ICD-11 6B05), with school refusal, repeated somatic symptoms (headache, abdominal pain) on separation, nightmares of separation, or refusal to sleep alone — impairing daily function.
- Refer promptly / escalate — co-occurring low mood, self-harm ideation, marked developmental regression, or query of an underlying developmental condition (e.g. autism, language disorder) that may be driving the anxiety. Screen for these, as the formulation changes management.
- Rule out medical mimics of somatic complaints before attributing wholly to anxiety.
The science, briefly
Separation anxiety is developmentally normal in infancy and toddlerhood; the disorder is distinguished by intensity, duration and impairment. ICD-11 codes it as 6B05 Separation anxiety disorder, and NICE supports CBT-based psychological therapy as first-line for childhood anxiety, with parent involvement central. Early structured support has good outcomes and reduces the risk of entrenched school avoidance.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 online form or a single observation. Our clinicians use a structured, clinician-administered AbilityScore® assessment to map the child's profile, distinguish primary anxiety from an underlying developmental driver, and shape a child psychology and behavioural therapy plan with the family. Where language or social communication is implicated, we co-ordinate the right pathway for that child. See more on Separation Anxiety Disorder.Trusted sources
WHO ICD-11 (6B05, separation anxiety disorder); NICE guidance on anxiety in children and young people; American Academy of Pediatrics guidance on childhood anxiety and school refusal.Next step — If distress has persisted beyond a month with functional impact, refer for a structured assessment with a Pinnacle child psychologist.
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
Escalate sooner if there is co-occurring low mood or self-harm ideation, developmental regression, persistent somatic complaints needing medical exclusion, or signs of an underlying developmental condition (autism, language disorder) driving the anxiety.
Try this at home
Coach parents in brief, predictable goodbye routines with a confident, warm departure and a reliable return — avoiding prolonged, anxious leave-takings, which inadvertently reinforce distress.
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 developmental therapy the right referral for separation anxiety?
Separation Anxiety Disorder is an anxiety disorder, so the evidence-based first line is CBT-based psychological therapy with parent involvement, not motor/speech developmental therapy. Refer for developmental assessment when you suspect an underlying developmental condition driving the anxiety.
How long should distress persist before referral?
Per ICD-11 (6B05) and DSM-5, distress disproportionate to developmental age persisting around four weeks or more, with functional impairment, warrants referral. Mild age-typical clinginess that settles quickly can be managed with parent guidance and review.
What red flags warrant prompt escalation?
Co-occurring low mood or self-harm ideation, marked developmental regression, persistent somatic complaints requiring medical exclusion, or a query of an underlying developmental condition such as autism or language disorder.