Early Intervention
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March 27, 2026

Your Child Deserves Support Now. Not in Six Months.

Philadelphia's early intervention waitlists are leaving families behind. Coral Care CEO Jennifer Wirt breaks down what to watch for, what your options are, and how to get your child support now.

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Jen Wirt, Coral Care CEO & Founder
Jen Wirt, Coral Care CEO & Founder

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When a parent in Philadelphia notices something is off with their child's development — maybe they're not talking yet, or struggling to keep up with other kids at daycare — the right instinct is to act fast. Get an evaluation. Start therapy. Help your child catch up.

The system, unfortunately, doesn't always cooperate.

Philadelphia has a federally mandated early intervention program that provides free evaluations and therapy services to children from birth through age five. Under federal law, once a child is found eligible and an Individualized Education Program (IEP) is completed, services are supposed to begin within 14 days. In reality, families are waiting months — and sometimes years.

One provider told Chalkbeat Philadelphia that the waitlist she could access for speech therapy alone was sometimes more than 2,000 families long. That's not a backlog. That's a crisis.

As someone who built Coral Care specifically to close gaps like this one, I want to make sure Philadelphia families — and the pediatricians, teachers, and school counselors who work with them — know what to watch for, what their options are, and what they can do right now.

What Parents Should Be Watching For

Developmental milestones aren't just checkboxes — they're a window into how your child's brain and body are growing. The earlier a delay is identified, the more effective intervention tends to be.

By 6 months: Making consistent eye contact, responding to sounds and voices, babbling and cooing, reaching and grasping objects.

By 12 months: Responding to their name, pointing to show interest, saying "mama" or "dada," pulling to stand.

By 18 months: Using at least a handful of words, following simple directions, playing alongside other children, walking steadily.

By 24 months: Combining two words ("more milk"), stacking blocks or turning pages, showing interest in other kids, using a spoon or cup.

Every child develops at their own pace — and that's real. But when something feels off, that feeling is worth taking seriously. Parents are honestly the best early detection system there is. If you're wondering where your child stands, Coral Care offers a free developmental screener you can take right now.

What To Do If You Have Concerns

Don't wait and see. I know that's easier said than felt — there's a natural instinct to hope things will resolve on their own. But in early childhood development, time is genuinely one of the most important variables. The brain is most malleable in these early years, and intervention during this window produces outcomes that are harder to replicate later.

Start with your pediatrician and name your concerns directly. You can also self-refer into Pennsylvania's early intervention system — no doctor's order required. For children under 3 in Philadelphia, call the city's Infant Toddler EI program at 215-685-4646. For ages 3–5, contact Elwyn Early Learning Services at 215-222-8054.

And if the public system has a waitlist — which, in Philadelphia, it very likely does — know that you have other options. Families can self-refer directly to Coral Care. We provide in-home speech therapy and occupational therapy covered through insurance, so you're not choosing between waiting and paying out of pocket. We come to your child, whether that's at home or at school.

What Pediatricians and Schools Can Do

For the referral partners reading this — pediatricians, early childhood educators, preschool directors, and school counselors — your role in this system is enormous. A parent who hears "I think we should get your child evaluated" from someone they trust moves faster than one who's trying to figure this out alone.

A few things worth knowing: families don't need a referral from you to access early intervention services in Pennsylvania, but your guidance helps them take that step. And when the public system has a waitlist, Coral Care is a direct referral pathway — we work with insurance, we come to the child, and we can often get families started faster than the public system currently can.

Simple Things Parents Can Do Every Day

The most powerful developmental support isn't a program or a product — it's you. Research consistently shows that everyday interactions between a caregiver and a child are the most important driver of early development.

Talk constantly. Narrate your day. Describe what you're making for dinner, what you see on a walk, what's happening in a book. Language exposure in the first years has a compounding effect on development.

Read together early. Even before a child understands words, hearing language and turning pages together builds foundational skills.

Let them do things. Stirring, pouring, zipping, stacking — these small acts of independence build fine motor skills and confidence in equal measure.

Be present and responsive. Researchers call it "serve and return" — when a child reaches out and a caregiver responds, that back-and-forth interaction is one of the most important things for brain development. You don't need a curriculum. You just need to show up.

Philadelphia Families Deserve Better Access

The access gap in Philadelphia's early intervention system is real, documented, and getting worse. Children who are legally entitled to services are waiting. Families are exhausted by a system that's supposed to help them. And the window for early intervention doesn't pause while a waitlist grows.

Coral Care exists because we believe every child — regardless of what the public waitlist looks like — deserves to be seen and supported. We're here for Philadelphia families.

Frequently Asked Questions

What should I do if I think my child might have a delay?

Don't wait. Start with our free developmental screener to get a clearer picture of where your child stands. If you have concerns, reach out to your pediatrician and consider self-referring to Coral Care — the earlier a child gets support, the better the outcomes.

What's the difference between speech therapy and occupational therapy?

Speech therapy addresses communication — including talking, understanding language, and in some cases feeding and swallowing. Occupational therapy focuses on the skills children need to participate in daily life: fine motor skills, sensory processing, self-care tasks like dressing and eating, and attention. Many children benefit from both, which is why Coral Care offers them together.

Can Coral Care and the public EI system work together?

Yes — they're not mutually exclusive. Some families work with Coral Care while waiting for public services to begin, and others use us alongside their public EI services. Our goal is to make sure your child isn't losing critical development time while paperwork and waitlists sort themselves out.

Does Coral Care accept insurance?

Yes. Coral Care works with insurance so that families can access in-home speech and occupational therapy without paying out of pocket. We'll help you understand your coverage when you reach out.

Do I need a referral to work with Coral Care?

No. Families can self-refer directly to Coral Care. You don't need a doctor's order or a referral from the public EI system. Just reach out and we'll take it from there.

What is Coral Care and how is it different?

Coral Care is a pediatric therapy company providing in-home speech therapy and occupational therapy for children across the Philadelphia region. Unlike the public early intervention system, we don't have a waitlist families have to navigate. We come directly to your child — at home or at school — and we work with insurance so families aren't paying out of pocket.

Why is there such a long wait for services in Philadelphia?

Philadelphia's early intervention system — particularly the preschool program for children ages 3–5 run through Elwyn — is significantly under-resourced relative to demand. There's a shortage of qualified therapists, and the administrative process can be slow. Families who are legally entitled to services are waiting months, sometimes longer. It's a real and documented problem, and it's part of why private providers like Coral Care exist.

What happens during an evaluation?

A team of specialists will assess your child across multiple developmental areas — communication, motor skills, cognition, and social-emotional development. It's not a test your child can pass or fail. The evaluation is designed to understand where your child is and what support would help them thrive. Results are shared with you, and if your child is eligible, you'll work with the team to build an Individualized Family Service Plan (IFSP) or Individualized Education Program (IEP).

How do I get my child evaluated?

In Pennsylvania, anyone can make a referral — you don't need a doctor's order. You can contact your pediatrician, call the statewide CONNECT line, or reach out directly to your local early intervention program. In Philadelphia, that's the Infant Toddler EI program (birth to 3) at 215-685-4646, or Elwyn Early Learning Services (ages 3–5) at 215-222-8054. You can also self-refer directly to Coral Care and we'll help guide you from there.

Who is eligible for early intervention services?

Any child from birth to age five who has a developmental delay or disability, or is at risk for one, may be eligible. You don't need a diagnosis to request an evaluation — a concern is enough to get the process started.

What is early intervention?

Early intervention is a federally mandated system of support for children from birth through age five who have developmental delays or disabilities. Services can include speech therapy, occupational therapy, physical therapy, and specialized instruction. The goal is to address delays during the earliest — and most critical — window of brain development, when support is most effective.

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