How are novel NDBI models developed as alternatives to pure ABA for autism?
According to the NHS and NICE, support for autistic children should focus on communication, play, daily living and participation, not just reducing symptoms or enforcing compliance. Naturalistic Developmental Behavioural Interventions, or NDBIs, were developed to blend behavioural teaching with developmental, play based, relationship focused approaches as a more child led alternative to very structured discrete trial ABA.
Understanding the concept
NDBIs were described in detail by Schreibman and colleagues as a merging of applied behaviour analysis and developmental science. They still use core ABA tools such as modelling, prompting and reinforcement, but sessions happen in everyday routines and play, with shared control between adult and child. Targets are developmentally sequenced and focus on joint attention, engagement, play and functional communication rather than only table top compliance.
The NHS and National Autistic Society (NAS) both highlight the importance of supporting communication and relationships in real life contexts, which fits closely with NDBI aims.
Evidence and impact
A large evidence synthesis by Crank et al. and related work in Minjarez et al. suggests that across models, NDBIs produce small to moderate improvements in social communication, language and broader development.
For the Early Start Denver Model, the toddler trial in PubMed by Dawson et al. found gains in IQ, language and adaptive behaviour compared with community services. A more recent trial by Yang et al. reported that a mixed ESDM programme outperformed a mixed discrete trial teaching programme on several developmental and symptom measures.
Pivotal Response Treatment has RCT evidence from Hardan et al. and Gengoux et al. showing improvements in functional language and social communication. JASPER, evaluated for example in Goods et al., focuses on joint attention and symbolic play and can enhance engagement when embedded into existing programmes.
Practical support and approaches
In practice, NDBIs are usually delivered in homes, nurseries or preschools, often with strong parent involvement. Adults follow the child’s interests, build playful routines and then weave in behavioural strategies to expand communication and flexible play. This style matches NICE recommendations for play based, social communication interventions that involve parents and teachers.
The NAS encourages approaches that respect autistic communication and build shared understanding, which NDBIs aim to support.
Challenges and considerations
Most NDBI trials involve modest samples, specialist teams and one to two year follow up, so it is still unclear how far early gains translate into later independence, education or mental health. Direct head to head comparisons with standard ABA remain rare, and harms or unintended effects are not systematically measured.
According to NICE and the NHS, any intervention, including NDBIs, should be chosen collaboratively, avoid punitive methods and be adapted to the child’s needs and preferences.
How services can help
UK services working within NICE and NHS frameworks can use NDBI principles alongside speech and language therapy, educational support and family work. The NAS can help families understand what child led, relationship based support should look like in practice.
Takeaway
NDBIs were developed as more naturalistic, developmental alternatives to highly structured ABA, keeping useful behavioural tools but embedding them in play, relationships and everyday life. Early evidence is encouraging, especially for social communication, but long term and comparative data are still limited, so choices should focus on what best supports each child’s communication, comfort and participation.
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.

