What autism services are available in Ontario while waiting for OAP?
While waiting for OAP Core Clinical Services, families can access: Foundational Family Services (free, no waitlist), school-based IEP supports, Preschool Speech and Language programs, EarlyON Child and Family Centres, private therapy (if financially able), and DSO registration for transition planning.
Source: Ontario Autism Program
How long does autism diagnosis take in Ontario?
Before joining the OAP waitlist, Ontario diagnostic waitlists average **12–24 months** at public hospitals. [OAP] This pre-waitlist delay means total time from first concern to therapy often exceeds **5–7 years**, an invisible bottleneck in official statistics.
Source: Ontario Autism Program [OAP]
What does the WHO say about early autism intervention timing?
The WHO Fact Sheet on Autism Spectrum Disorders (2023) states that timely access to early evidence-based psychosocial interventions can improve the ability of autistic children to communicate effectively and interact socially. Dawson et al. (2010, Pediatrics; PMID 19948568) confirmed in an RCT that ESDM (Early Start Denver Model) at 18–30 months produced significant developmental gains.
Source: WHO Fact Sheet: Autism Spectrum Disorders (2023); Dawson et al., Pediatrics 2010 (PMID 19948568)
Feeding Therapy in Windsor, Quick Summary
Pediatric feeding therapy in Windsor is available privately with waits of 6–12 weeks at specialized SLP/OT clinics.
Hospital-based feeding programs (SickKids, CHEO) have longer waits of 18–36 months (hospital-based programs) for funded services.
Delivered by SLPs or OTs with feeding specialty — OHIP covers some hospital-based services; OAP Childhood Budget can also apply.
Always request an SLP or OT with specific pediatric feeding credentials (SOS Approach or Sequential Oral Sensory training).
Windsor · Ontario Autism Program
Feeding Therapy in Windsor: What It Costs and How Long You Wait
OAP-funded wait is 18–36 months (hospital-based programs). Private therapy runs $150–$250/hr. Here is how to navigate both options.
OAP vs Private: Cost and Wait Comparison
How OAP-funded and private feeding therapy compare in Windsor
Factor
OAP-Funded
Private (Out-of-Pocket)
Cost
Eligible under Childhood Budget when delivered by a registered OAP-approved SLP or OT
$150–$250/hr per session
Annual Budget
$5,000–$20,000/year (Childhood Budget)
$600–$2,000/month (4–8 sessions)
Wait Time
18–36 months (hospital-based programs)
6–12 weeks
OHIP Coverage
N/A (OAP, not OHIP)
Some hospital-based feeding programs covered by OHIP (SickKids, CHEO feeding clinic)
Private Insurance
N/A
SLP and OT services often covered under extended health plans at $500–$2,000/year
Local Providers
3+ certified practitioners
Many private clinics available
Wait times and costs are estimates based on regional data and provider surveys. Individual experiences vary. Last updated: 2026-04-10.
Feeding Therapy Providers in Windsor
Key organizations offering feeding therapy in the Windsor area. Always verify OAP eligibility and current availability directly with the provider.
Windsor Regional Hospital — Pediatric SLP
OAP Provider
Feeding AssessmentSLP Feeding TherapyDysphagia
Primary hospital feeding service in Windsor-Essex
Hotel-Dieu Grace Healthcare — Pediatric SLP
OAP Provider
Feeding TherapySLP Services
Hospital-based; confirm OAP billing eligibility
Autism Ontario — Windsor-Essex Chapter
Community Organization
Feeding therapy referralsFamily support
This is not a complete directory. Search AccessOAP for the full list of approved providers in your area.
How to Get Feeding Therapy in Windsor
Three steps to access feeding therapy through OAP or private funding.
1
Get a pediatrician referral to a feeding specialist
Ask your pediatrician for a referral to a pediatric feeding program at SickKids, CHEO, or a local children's hospital. For private services, a referral is not required but can help with insurance reimbursement.
2
Find an SLP or OT with feeding specialty
Look for clinicians with specialized feeding training such as the SOS Approach to Feeding (Sequential Oral Sensory) or ARFID-specific training. Verify credentials on caslpo.com (SLPs) or coto.org (OTs).
3
Use OAP Childhood Budget for private feeding therapy
Register on accessoap.com to unlock your Childhood Budget. Feeding therapy delivered by an OAP-approved SLP or OT can be claimed through the Childhood Budget while waiting for hospital-based programs.
Start with AccessOAP
Registering on AccessOAP is free and unlocks your Childhood Budget immediately. You do not have to wait for Core Clinical Services to start using OAP funding.
Pediatric feeding therapy is available in Windsor through private SLP and OT clinics specializing in feeding disorders. Hospital-based feeding programs (SickKids, CHEO) are available in Toronto and Ottawa with longer wait times. Ask your pediatrician for a referral or search private SLP clinics on caslpo.com.
Feeding therapy addresses extreme food selectivity, oral sensory aversions, texture refusal, food anxiety, unsafe swallowing, and failure to thrive. Many autistic children have Avoidant/Restrictive Food Intake Disorder (ARFID).
Yes, if delivered by an OAP-approved SLP or OT. Claim through your Childhood Budget ($5,000–$20,000/year). Some hospital-based feeding programs may also be covered under OHIP. Confirm eligibility with your AccessOAP coordinator before starting.
The Sequential Oral Sensory (SOS) Approach is an evidence-based feeding therapy program that uses a hierarchy of food interaction steps — from tolerating food nearby to eventually eating it. SOS-trained therapists work through sensory, motor, and behavioural components of feeding challenges.
Feeding therapy is typically a long-term commitment of 6–18 months depending on severity. Sessions are usually weekly (60 minutes), and families practise food exposure strategies at home between sessions. Progress can be slow but is measurable.
Disclaimer: This page provides general information only. Costs, wait times, and provider availability change frequently. Always verify directly with providers and AccessOAP. Nothing on this page constitutes medical or legal advice.
About This Article
Written by:Spencer Carroll - Founder & Autism AdvocateParent of autistic child navigating OAP system
Early Start Denver Model (ESDM) delivered to children aged 18–30 months produced significant gains in IQ, adaptive behaviour, and autism severity — some children no longer met diagnostic criteria at follow-up
Cochrane systematic review finds evidence that early intensive behavioural intervention (EIBI) may produce positive effects on adaptive behaviour and communication for young children with ASD (low certainty of evidence)
WHO recommends accessible, community-based early interventions for children with autism — timely evidence-based psychosocial interventions improve communication and social engagement