Prioritizing choice and assent in the assessment and treatment of food selectivity.

Int J Dev Disabil

Vanderbilt Kennedy Center, Treatment and Research Institute for Autism Spectrum Disorders, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Western New England University, Springfield, MA, USA.

Published: February 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Food selectivity impacts a significant number of individuals, with a notable prevalence among both those with and without disabilities, highlighting the urgency for positive intervention strategies.
  • A study focused on developing a treatment plan for food selectivity in young children with developmental disabilities that emphasized cooperation with caregivers, allowing children to make choices, and avoiding restrictive methods.
  • The treatment successfully improved the consumption of non-preferred foods, engaged caregivers in the process, and pointed towards practical applications and future research possibilities.

Article Abstract

Food selectivity affects up to 72% and 45% of individuals with and without disabilities, respectively, and there is a need for interventions that rely on positive, unrestrictive strategies. We evaluated an assessment and treatment package for food selectivity for young children with developmental disabilities that prioritized caregiver collaboration, client autonomy, and did not rely on restrictive procedures (e.g. escape extinction). The process involved: (a) collaborating with caregivers on the selection of foods and design of the children's functional analyses; (b) indirectly and directly measuring food preferences prior to treatment; (c) evaluating the sensitivity of mealtime problem behavior to environmental variables through an interview-informed synthesized contingency analysis (IISCA); and (c) incorporating the assessment results into a progressive treatment process consisting of choice-making opportunities and differential reinforcement of successive approximations to consumption. Children also had the ability to opt in and out of treatment sessions. The treatment was effective in increasing consumption of nonpreferred foods and successfully extended to caregivers. Practical implications and directions for future research are discussed.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9897803PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/20473869.2022.2123196DOI Listing

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