Behavioral Support Collaboration

Behavioral support and coordinated care planning, built around the individual.

The Golden Hue Healthcare Services collaborates with a Board Certified Behavior Analyst (BCBA) when appropriate to support individuals who may benefit from behavioral support strategies, behavior-informed approaches, and coordinated care planning.

Our Approach

Compassionate strategies, grounded in evidence.

Some individuals we serve benefit from additional behavioral support — whether that means developing communication strategies, navigating sensory or health-related factors, or coordinating across multiple providers. Through our collaboration with a qualified BCBA professional, we bring informed, person-centered insight into everyday support without losing sight of the individual. The Golden Hue does not directly provide clinical or medical services; the BCBA relationship is a professional collaboration that enhances person-centered supports.

All recommendations are person-centered, trauma-informed, and aligned with New Jersey DDD requirements. We work in partnership with families, guardians, and support coordinators at every step.

  • Functional Behavioral Assessment

    The collaborating BCBA reviews each individual's history, environment, and current presentation to understand the function of behaviors before recommending strategies.

  • Behavior Support Plans

    Written, person-centered plans aligned with NJ DDD expectations — focused on teaching skills, reducing risk, and preserving dignity.

  • Coordinated Care Planning

    Coordination across the individual's care team, day programs, and support coordinators so behavioral and care needs are addressed together rather than in isolation.

  • DSP Training & Coaching

    Our Direct Support Professionals receive guidance and modeling so support strategies are implemented consistently, respectfully, and effectively.

When behavioral collaboration may help

  • Behaviors that interfere with safety, learning, or community participation
  • Communication challenges contributing to frustration or distress
  • Co-occurring health considerations that benefit from coordinated planning
  • Transitions across providers, day programs, or living arrangements