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Early Childhood Intervention
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Food & Eating Delays
Back to: Therapist
Questions & Answers - Food Concerns
My husband and I adopted a little boy from China. He had cleft lip
and cleft palate; both have been repaired. He just turned. It was a real
struggle getting him to eat from a spoon, but we finally achieved that
goal. He still will only accept slightly chunky pureed food.
If we give him anything with more form or texture, he gags on it
and will spit it out, and he doesn't seem to know how to chew. We
know he has sensory disorders and some developmental delays due to
orphanage living. He only says about four words. Any advice you can
give on how to transition him away from pureed food would be so
appreciated.
Your question, though brief, provided many possible factors that are
contributing to your child's resistance to transitioning from pureed
foods. When evaluating a child for feeding treatment, I will look at
several elements that impact "normal eating." These are environmental,
sensory, motor skills, and developmental. Based on your summary, your
child has many factors weighing into feeding problems.
It sounds as though transition from bottle to spoon occurred late
due to cleft palate and lip, orphanage feeding practices, and
surgeries, not to mention cultural and environmental changes. Some
thoughts to keep in mind: if quality is good over time, quantity
will follow; if quantity is pushed too early, children will shut
down and become averse to eating.
Since your son is over 3 years old, offer pureed foods your entire
family is eating to increase flavor and nutrition. Use ice cube trays to
freeze leftovers and pop into freezer bags for other meals. Typically,
each cube equals 2 oz. This is great if you are monitoring calorie
intake and volume. Heat makes foods more flavorful. If he is
refusing/spitting foods out, you may want to present foods at room
temperature or cold.
Steps leading to chewing begin: thin creamy, no chewing; then thicker
creamy; then on to thicker with small, discreet lumps. Chewing starts
with dry, meltable, crunchy foods placed on molars for munching. Use
foods such as shortbread cookies, graham crackers, cheese curls,
hull-less popcorn, and vanilla wafers during snack time. Offer foods he
likes/prefers, then begin to offer similar foods. For example, if he
will eat applesauce, puree canned pears and peaches. This practice is
called "food chaining. If he will eat smooth strawberry yogurt, offer a
variety of flavors (peach, blueberry, raspberry, etc.) but continue with
smooth texture. There is a great book on the subject, titled Food
Chaining, by Cheri Fraker. It can be found at most bookstores in the
child development section.
Finally, seek out an outpatient feeding program in your area that
offers occupational, speech, and nutrition services where oral motor
skills, sensory processing disorder, and growth/nutritional needs can be
addressed due to the complexity of his feeding.
Back to: Therapist Questions
& Answers - Food Concerns
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