Friday, July 27, 2012

Picky eater or problem feeder?


Is your child a picky eater or a problem feeder?  Picky eaters should be monitored, but problem feeders will benefit from professional intervention from a speech-language pathologist or occupational therapist that specializes in working with children who are problem feeders.  

Picky Eaters versus Problem Feeders



Picky Eaters                                                                  
-decreased range or variety of foods; will eat at least 30 different foods

-foods lost due to ‘burn out’ because of a food jag are usually regained after a 2 week break

-able to tolerate new foods on plate; can touch or taste a new food (even if reluctantly)


-eats at least one food from most food texture or nutrition groups (purees, meltables, proteins, fruits)

-frequently eats a different set of foods at a meal than the rest of the family

-will add new foods to repertoire (even if it takes exploration and/or multiple exposures)

-sometimes reported by parents as a ‘picky eater’ at well-child check-ups

-struggling with your child about mealtime is common





Problem Feeders

-restricted range or variety of foods, usually less than 20 different foods

-foods lost due to food jags are NOT re-acquired after taking a break, often resulting in a decreasing number of foods in a child’s repertoire

-cries and ‘falls apart’ when presented with new foods; complete refusal

-refuses entire categories of food texture or nutrition groups (meats, vegetables, soft cube textures)

-almost always eats different foods at a meal than the rest of the family (often doesn’t eat with the family)

-adds new foods but takes several exposures and extremely slow progression with exploration of the foods before ingesting

-persistently reported by parent as a ‘picky eater’ across multiple well-child check-ups

-family meals are a daily/continual struggle