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This investigation proposes to examine the effectiveness of a technology supported treatment manual for pediatric feeding disorders. Children with pediatric feeding disorders display intense avoidance behaviors (e.g., crying, tantrums, and disruptions) that prevent appropriate nutritional intake during meals and lead to a number of negative and potentially life threatening medical outcomes, including chronic malnutrition, growth retardation, and placement of a feeding tube. To date, behavioral intervention involving extinction-based procedures represents the only treatment for pediatric feeding disorders supported by research to improve mealtime behaviors. Due to the chronic and extreme nature of food refusal, treatment typically requires intensive, daily intervention conducted at highly specialized clinics to improve feeding behaviors. The cost and duration of intervention can total as much as $60,000 per child requiring up to 6 to 8 weeks, respectively. The potential for serious consequences associated with chronic food refusal, combined with the high cost of treatment, intensifies the need to identify means to disseminate effective treatment approaches to the broader community of healthcare providers.
The proposed study represents the first attempt to systematically investigate the use of a treatment manual to address chronic food aversion through a randomized, waitlist control trial in children treated at the Marcus Autism Center's Pediatrics Feeding Disorders Program. This study will involve a total of 20 participants randomly assigned to experimental conditions: technology supported treatment manual or waitlist control group (10 in each group). Children assigned to the waitlist control group will receive the technology supported treatment manual after the specified time on the waitlist. All participants will receive the same behavioral protocol involving three treatment sessions per day (45 minutes in length), for a total of 15 sessions across five consecutive days. Data will be collected on feeding behaviors during each treatment session and at follow-up using trained observers to collect data on mealtime behaviors, including acceptance, swallowing, disruption, expulsion, and grams consumed. This type of data collection and treatment is standard practice in the feeding disorders program; however, the use of a touch screen application for data capture with integrated manual is novel to this project.
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Inclusion criteria
Participants must demonstrate failure to meet appropriate nutritional and/or energy needs based on DSM-V criteria (American Psychiatric Association, 2013) for Avoidant/Restrictive Food Intake Disorder, focusing exclusively on children with dependence on enteral feeding or oral supplementation with a nutritionally complete formula. Specifically, participants must have a history of food refusal as evidenced by tube, formula, or bottle dependence, receiving at least 50% of their nutritional needs from this method of intake. In order to be considered eligible, participants will need to meet the following inclusion criteria: 1) Present with partial food refusal as evidenced by greater than 50% of caloric needs met by bottle, formula, or tube feedings; 2) Have a medical history significant for an organic factor (e.g., gastrointestinal issues) which precipitated or played a role in the development of feeding concern; 3) Fall between the ages of 12 months and 6 years, which will ensure a sample of children appropriate for the introduction of solid food; and 4) Patients must be English literate.
Exclusion criteria
The following will be considered ineligible to participate in the study: 1) Patients with active medical diagnoses requiring hospitalization or significant oversight from a physician; and 2) Patients with active medical, structural, or functional limitations preventing safe oral intake of pureed foods (e.g., aspiration, upper airway obstruction).
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20 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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