Houston Chronicle

Texas Senate approves bill mandating licenses for autism treatment specialist­s

- By Sebastian Herrera sebastian.herrera@chron.com

A bill that would require specialist­s who treat children with autism to be licensed in Texas passed the full Senate in Austin this week after some pushback from the psychology community.

The measure, SB 589, sponsored by Sen. Eddie Lucio Jr., D-Brownsvill­e, would require licenses for applied behavior analysts, who are mostly known for their treatment of autism. An amended version of the bill passed 25-6 on Monday and is now being reviewed in the Texas House.

Supporters say the legislatio­n is needed to regulate the profession. If enacted, Texas would join 26 other states in requiring applied behavior analysts to be licensed.

“We are overjoyed with all of the support we had from the senators,” said Dorothea Lerman, director of the Center for Autism and Developmen­tal Disabiliti­es at the University of Houston Clear Lake and president of the Texas Associatio­n for Behavior Analysis. “They seem to understand the importance of this bill. Given adequate time in the House, we believe they will pass it.” Associatio­n opposes

The amended bill would charge the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation with regulating the licenses. The original version assigned that task to the Texas Medical Board.

Representa­tives of organizati­ons such as the Texas Psychology Associatio­n have expressed opposition to the bill. Psychologi­sts have said the licenses should be regulated by the Texas Board of Examiners of Psychologi­sts because behavior analysis has origins in psychology.

Applied behavior analysis is the most well-known and research-backed treatment for children in the autism spectrum. It breaks down weaknesses into small goals and rewards children for each goal completed. Treatment can require up to 40 hours per week of one-on-one time and can cost tens of thousands of dollars.

One in every 68 children in the U.S. are autistic, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. About 1,300 behavior analysts in Texas are certified through the the national Behavior Analysts Certificat­ion Board, which requires at least a master’s degree from a credible behavior analysis program at a university, along with field work and other requiremen­ts. But without a requiremen­t for licensure, anyone can practice behavior analysis with little to no experience. Has support in House

Supporters say the law could also lead insurance providers that do not cover the practice to change their policies.

The bill includes exemptions for other licensed profession­als such as psychologi­sts, who have their own licensure requiremen­ts.

In the last legislativ­e session, the House passed a behavior analysis licensure bill before it stalled in the Senate. This session, stakeholde­rs pushed the bill through the Senate first because it already has support in the House. The session ends May 29.

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