Autism Spectrum Disorder
Different, not deficient — and specific support makes a real difference
- Therapy, psychiatry, and follow-up in one care plan
- Private, clinician-led support from the first step
Choose a callback or WhatsApp. We’ll help set an appointment with a leading psychiatrist in this condition.
Start with a private screen
A short clinician-validated screener gives you and the care team a clearer starting point before a consultation.
A clear first read, before you speak to us
Take a short, confidential questionnaire that helps name the pattern you’re noticing. You’ll sign in or create an account first so the result is saved privately and can be used by the care team.
- 3-10 minutes
- Clinician-validated
- Not a diagnosis
Understanding autism spectrum disorder
ASD is a developmental condition that shapes how a person communicates, processes sensory input, and relates socially. It is a spectrum — support needs vary widely. Many individuals live full, self-directed lives with the right accommodations; others benefit from more structured help.
A diagnosis is not a label to shrink under. It’s the key to the right supports, at the right time.
What people typically notice
Not a diagnostic checklist — a map of patterns that often bring people in.
- Social communication differences — tone, eye contact, back-and-forth conversation
- Strong preference for routine; distress when routines change
- Intense focused interests
- Sensory sensitivities — sound, light, texture, crowds
- Literal interpretation of language
- Repetitive behaviours or movements
- (Childhood) delayed language or unusual developmental patterns
Earlier is always better
You don’t need to wait for things to get worse to be entitled to care.
- A child’s development feels different from their peers in ways that persist
- An adult has always felt “out of sync” socially and wonders if there’s a reason
- School, work, or relationships would benefit from targeted support
Therapy and medication both have a role
We’re neutral by design: the plan depends on your presentation, not on ideology. Here’s how each contributes.
Evidence-based interventions include speech & language support, occupational therapy for sensory regulation, and skills-focused behavioural therapy. For adolescents and adults, therapy often focuses on social scripts, self-advocacy, and managing co-occurring anxiety or depression.
ASD itself isn’t treated with medication. Medication may help co-occurring conditions — anxiety, ADHD, depression, sleep — that are common and that respond in the usual ways.
When medication is part of the plan, adherence is often the single largest factor in long-term outcomes. Our care team checks in on dosing, side- effects, and refills — so you’re not alone in managing it.
What happens when you reach out
No black box — here’s how care unfolds for this condition.
- Consultation
A care coordinator calls (or WhatsApps, your choice). You tell us what’s going on — no forms, no pressure.
- Expert Psychiatrist
We book you with a psychiatrist who is a leading authority in this condition — not a generalist.
- Assessment
If the psychiatrist recommends it, a senior clinical psychologist runs in-depth assessments before we shape the plan.
- Therapy + Medicine
Structured therapy with a senior clinical psychologist when indicated, plus medication adherence support — both coordinated by the same team.
- Ongoing care
Medication reviews, therapy adjustments, and continuity of care — the same team stays with you as things evolve.
Before you book
Is late-in-life diagnosis meaningful?
Yes. Many adults find that a diagnosis reframes their whole history and unlocks accommodations, community, and targeted support. It’s not about changing who you are.
My child was diagnosed — will therapy try to make them “less autistic”?
No. Quality intervention builds skills and regulation, not masking. The goal is a thriving, self-aware person — not one who passes as neurotypical at a cost to themselves.
Ready to take the first step?
Book a call with our care team. We’ll match you with a leading psychiatrist in autism spectrum disorder and take it from there.