Agenda Summary
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Calling on MassHealth to enforce existing administrative regulations and statutory authority pertaining to the provision of Applied Behavioral Analysis services.
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Official Text
WHEREAS: In America today, one in 36 children have a form of Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD); and
WHEREAS: The first years of life are the most consequential in human development, as well as predictive, for how the course of an individual's life, educational attainment, and other quality-of-life metrics. Despite everything we know about early intervention for children with ASD, Massachusetts has an acute shortage of key practitioners who are crucial in the provision of ABA services: Applied Behavioral Analysts (BCBA) resulting in a waitlist of 2,000-3,500 children ages 2-5, at any given time; and
WHEREAS: While diagnosable by a specialist by age 2, the average age of autism diagnosis in Massachusetts is 5.3 years old, per the National Autism Data Center, and the wait time for children with ASD, and their parents/guardians, can be for years on end, putting these children at severe risk of failing to receive critical intervention in what is a narrow and ever-closing window of human neurological development; and
WHEREAS: Massachusetts operates under a “two-tier” delivery model of ABA services rather than a “three-tier” delivery model, like California and Michigan; and
WHEREAS: Under the “three-tier” delivery model, there is, a Board Certified Assistant Applied Behavior Analyst (BCaBA), a mid-level provider type with supervisor authority licensed by the Department of Public Health; and
WHEREAS: Access to care is almost doubled under a 3-tier model as one BCBA is able to oversee 10-16 clients in a 3-tier model (with support from 1-2 BCaBAs), but only 6-10 in a 2-tier model with no support supervision from BCaBAs; and
WHEREAS: The clinical competency of brand new BCBAs is enhanced as they spend significant time as a mid-tier BCaBA supervisor, shadowing experienced BCBA...
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