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How does ABA therapy differ from Relationship Development Intervention (RDI) in supporting autism? 

Author: Hannah Smith, MSc | Reviewed by: Dr. Rebecca Fernandez, MBBS

Families exploring support for autism often encounter both ABA (Applied Behaviour Analysis) and RDI (Relationship Development Intervention) and understandably want to know how they compare. The NHS describes a wide range of therapies and supports for autistic people but does not endorse specific branded programmes. In a similar way, NICE focuses on principles such as person-centred care, family involvement, and behavioural understanding, rather than recommending ABA or RDI by name. 

This article offers an evidence-informed overview to help you understand the differences and current UK context. It is for general information only and not a recommendation for or against any specific therapy. 

Understanding the concept 

Applied Behaviour Analysis (ABA) is an umbrella term for approaches that use behaviour-analytic principles (like reinforcement, prompting and systematic teaching) to build skills and reduce behaviours that cause distress or risk. ABA can look very different in practice, ranging from highly structured sessions at a table to naturalistic, play-based work or Positive Behaviour Support in everyday environments. 

Common ABA-informed approaches include: 

  • Discrete trial teaching (DTT) 
  • Early intensive behavioural intervention (EIBI) 
  • Naturalistic developmental behavioural interventions (NDBIs) 
  • Positive Behaviour Support (PBS) 

Relationship Development Intervention (RDI) is a parent-mediated, developmental-relational approach. It focuses on “dynamic intelligence” – things like flexible thinking, shared attention and coping with change – using guided everyday interactions between the autistic person and their caregivers. Rather than targeting specific behaviours in small steps, RDI centres on co-regulation, emotional connection and participation in family life. 

In the UK, the NHS and NICE generally talk about “behavioural” or “psychosocial” interventions in broader terms. They emphasise understanding the function of behaviour, adapting environments, supporting communication and working collaboratively with families. 

Evidence and impact 

Research into ABA-type interventions is much more extensive than research into RDI. 

Large reviews and meta-analyses of ABA-based and NDBI approaches suggest: 

  • Benefits for some children in areas such as communication, daily living skills and challenging behaviour 
  • Effect sizes that are often modest to moderate, not “cures” 
  • Variation in outcomes depending on intensity, quality, child characteristics and family context 
  • Gaps in the evidence around autistic adults, long-term quality of life and possible adverse effects 

By contrast, RDI has only a small body of research, usually: 

  • Small case series or pre–post studies 
  • Parent-report measures rather than independent assessment 
  • No large, well-designed randomised controlled trials to date 

Reviews consistently describe RDI as “promising but unproven” and highlight major methodological limitations. 

Importantly, NICE does not endorse ABA or RDI as specific “packages”. Instead, it recommends: 

  • Individualised psychosocial interventions based on behavioural principles and functional assessment 
  • Family involvement and support 
  • Attention to communication, anxiety and daily living skills 
  • Avoidance of unproven or potentially harmful interventions 

The National Autistic Society (NAS) notes that behaviour-analytic approaches are among the most researched, but also recognises that experiences vary widely and that some autistic people report harm from more coercive or compliance-driven programmes. 

Practical support and approaches 

What ABA-style interventions look like in practice 

In modern, values-based practice, ABA-informed programmes often: 

  • Use functional assessment to understand why behaviours occur 
  • Teach functional communication (for example, asking for a break instead of hitting) 
  • Break complex skills (dressing, toothbrushing, safety) into smaller, teachable steps 
  • Use positive reinforcement (praise, access to preferred activities) to encourage learning 
  • Collect data to check whether strategies are working and adjust accordingly 

Positive Behaviour Support which the NAS describes as person-centred and rights-based is one way behaviour analysis is applied in UK education, social care and health services. It emphasises improving quality of life, adjusting environments and reducing restrictive practices. 

What RDI-style interventions look like in practice 

RDI typically involves: 

  • Intensive parent coaching – parents learn to create structured, but emotionally warm, interaction opportunities 
  • Focus on shared attention, flexibility, co-regulation and “good-enough” uncertainty, rather than specific academic or self-care skills 
  • Embedding work into everyday activities such as cooking, walking or play 
  • Long-term programmes, often privately funded and variable in cost and availability 

Families who use RDI sometimes report greater confidence in supporting their child emotionally and relationally, but this is based on limited research and anecdotal reports rather than large, controlled studies. 

Challenges and considerations 

Ethical and lived-experience concerns around ABA 

Some autistic adults describe past ABA as: 

  • Highly compliance-focused (for example, teaching to say “yes” or make eye contact regardless of distress) 
  • Punitive or dismissive of sensory pain and anxiety 
  • Encouraging “masking” – hiding autistic traits to appear more “normal” 

These experiences have led to strong criticism from parts of the autistic community. In response, many behaviour analysts now emphasise: 

  • Trauma-informed practice 
  • Seeking assent (actively checking that the person is willing to participate) 
  • Avoiding aversives and punishment 
  • Co-producing goals that genuinely matter to the autistic person and family 

The NAS highlights PBS as a way of grounding behaviour support in rights, values and quality-of-life outcomes, rather than narrow compliance. 

Concerns and gaps around RDI 

RDI attracts less ethical controversy in terms of coercion, but key concerns include: 

  • Very limited evidence – no strong trials to show consistent benefit 
  • High cost and equity issues, as it is usually privately funded 
  • Proprietary training and branding, making independent evaluation harder 
  • Little data on autistic adults’ perspectives of having been raised with RDI 

From an evidence-informed perspective, this means it is difficult to say how effective RDI is compared with other, more tested approaches. 

UK guidance perspective 

UK frameworks, such as NICE and national learning-disability guidance, focus on: 

  • Person-centred planning 
  • Behavioural understanding and environmental adjustments 
  • Family support and psychoeducation 
  • Integration with education, mental health and social care 

They do not promote ABA or RDI as named “brands”. Instead, services are encouraged to select interventions based on principles (evidence, safety, proportionality, consent) rather than labels. 

How services can help 

If you are considering any intensive intervention, it can help to: 

  • Ask your local NHS team what support is available, and how it aligns with NICE guidance 
  • Look for practitioners who are transparent about evidence and limitations, and who adapt to sensory, communication and emotional needs 
  • Check that goals focus on reducing distress and building meaningful skills, not simply making the person “look less autistic” 
  • Involve the whole family where appropriate and consider impact on relationships 

The NAS offers information and helplines for families navigating decisions about interventions, and its directory lists services alongside descriptions rather than endorsements. Relationship-focused supports such as Loving Difference and the NAS support group for partners may also help partners think through how any intervention fits with their values and day-to-day life. 

Communication guidance from Newcastle Hospitals reminds services to adapt interaction style and environment principles that should apply to any ABA-type or RDI-style work. 

Takeaway 

ABA and RDI are both frameworks for supporting autistic people, but they differ in theory, methods and evidence. Behaviour-analytic and NDBI approaches have a far stronger empirical base than RDI, particularly for young children, yet they also raise important ethical questions that modern practice is still working to address. RDI is more relational in emphasis but remains under-researched. 

If you or someone you support would benefit from early identification or structured autism guidance, visit Autism Detect, a UK-based platform offering professional assessment tools and evidence-informed support for autistic individuals and families. 

Hannah Smith, MSc
Author

Hannah Smith is a clinical psychologist with a Master’s in Clinical Psychology and over three years of experience in behaviour therapy, special education, and inclusive practices. She specialises in Applied Behavior Analysis (ABA), Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT), and inclusive education strategies. Hannah has worked extensively with children and adults with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD), ADHD, Down syndrome, and intellectual disabilities, delivering evidence-based interventions to support development, mental health, and well-being.

All qualifications and professional experience stated above are authentic and verified by our editorial team. However, pseudonym and image likeness are used to protect the author's privacy. 

Dr. Rebecca Fernandez, MBBS
Reviewer

Dr. Rebecca Fernandez is a UK-trained physician with an MBBS and experience in general surgery, cardiology, internal medicine, gynecology, intensive care, and emergency medicine. She has managed critically ill patients, stabilised acute trauma cases, and provided comprehensive inpatient and outpatient care. In psychiatry, Dr. Fernandez has worked with psychotic, mood, anxiety, and substance use disorders, applying evidence-based approaches such as CBT, ACT, and mindfulness-based therapies. Her skills span patient assessment, treatment planning, and the integration of digital health solutions to support mental well-being.

All qualifications and professional experience stated above are authentic and verified by our editorial team. However, pseudonym and image likeness are used to protect the reviewer's privacy. 

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