Feeding Clinic...Is It a Waste of Time? What Happens There?

Updated on July 28, 2012
M.S. asks from Troutdale, OR
4 answers

The dietician at WIC recommended a feeding clinic for my son to see why he doesn't eat so many foods. I have to jump through a lot of hoops to get him into one, which is fine, and I don't mind, I was just wondering if its worth it, and what they do there. I haven't really ever heard of one before so I thought I would ask for experiences from all you wonderful moms and dads. Thanks for any stories and help you have. By the way, he is 15 months today. My, don't they grow fast?

ETA: Elena, wow, thanks, just your one experience makes me realize that I need to make sure that he gets there. I would still love to hear from other parents too, though.

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So What Happened?

No, it is an acutal clinic where they work on why the child won't eat, or only eats certain foods. Thanks for the information, I plan to take him to the doctor to get a referal on Monday because its important that he learns to eat more foods. Life is not survived by crackers and apples alone!

More Answers

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E.B.

answers from Denver on

My dd has been to two: one at around age 2 and one in her teens. Both were for food aversions due to medical problems, not anorexia or emotional problems, so I can't speak for those.

However, in the first one, the therapist (he was a psychologist) asked us a lot of questions, and just let dd play in the room while we talked. There were a lot of toys. There was no pressure on her. We explained how challenging it was to get her to eat (and we had a 4 year old at the time and he was a normal eater). The pediatrician had referred us to the feeding program because dd was so underweight.

After a couple of sessions he had dd sit at the table and observed what happened when food was set before her. That didn't go well. So over the next few sessions he would have her play while we ate some food at the table (some cheese and crackers, etc). She didn't have to approach the table. Then he had her sit at the table, but there wasn't any food. Then he had us bring in her brother and he sat and ate and we all talked.

Eventually he invited her to the table and set just a doll's plate with one Cheerio on it. She didn't have to eat it but she couldn't pitch a fit.

Gradually, she took a willing bite, although this took several weeks, even a couple of months.

Throughout all of this he would explain to us that her medical issues had caused an aversion to food, and he told us that the things we did with our son, who had no medical issues, just wouldn't work with our dd. It was very educational. I do think it was just as, or more, valuable for us, her parents, to figure out how to approach her.

The second time was when she was a young teen, and that too was worthwhile. The therapist talked directly to dd then, since she was older, and asked her what she did and did not like. Each session, a theme was presented, like fruits, or new tastes, or familiar foods in different forms (like pasta with a different kind of sauce), and dd had to sample them all. The therapist explored what dd did and did not like but got her to try new foods. It was pretty amazing: dd told her she did not like the taste of organic milk. The therapist did a blind taste test with 5 different milks (regular, organic, soy, skim, and goat) and dd correctly, and instantly, identified all 5. The end result was that she was willing to try some new things but we all agreed, there are some things she just can't handle. Bananas are completely out, and organic milk. Weird, I know.

But each time, I learned a lot. I didn't feel like dd was being allowed to not eat certain things out of stubbornness, but I felt like I was learning about her differences. And we learned how to introduce foods and what not to do. For us as parents, it was really eye-opening.

3 moms found this helpful
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S.G.

answers from Jacksonville on

Is this put on by WIC or is it one of the classes you have to take every so often to get your vouchers?? If it is a class, you'll have to go but it won't be taught by anyone that specializes in food aversions, eating issues. They are basic nutrition classes at best. If you really feel he has an eating issue please talk to his Ped and get recommendations from them not the WIC office.

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H.D.

answers from Dallas on

My special needs son has gone through two rounds of feeding clinics. The first time my son finally learned how to use a fork which was a big deal at my house, but no new foods. Then we waited about 18 months and tried again to see if he'd matured more to handle the class and the second time through he picked up about 4 new foods, which again, was huge for us and our situation. Just know that there are several different approaches in feeding clinincs. Our therapists opted to use the S.O.S method (you can google it). But not all therapists are trained in every form of feeding therapy so you get their opinion on what they feels works the best. So, with that said, if you feel the first time through your child got nothing out of it, try another therapist and a different aproach.

W/the S.O.S protocol, it's about introducing foods that look similar in size, shape and color to get new foods down your kid. Good luck!

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L.P.

answers from Portland on

We went to the feeding clinic after being bullied by our (then) pediatrician for our underweight adopted daughter. She was about 14-18 months at the time. There was a dietician, social worker, doctor, therapist and one or two other people. They were looking for signs of listlessness, inability to swallow, inability to manually or with a utensil to feed herself. My daughter clearly did not fit any of those things. So we ended up just talking about adoption while my daughter played with the toys and ate some Cheetos. Our insurance paid for very little of this session. She has always been an fine eater--she is now 7 and still active and still slender; but as my pediatric nurse friend said, she's fine as long as the curve is going up.

I have read in a book called "Welcome to your Child's Brain" that if you want to introduce new foods or tastes, it is fine to put spinach with ice cream--when they are being introduced to new food it doesn't matter how they are presented. Our pediatrician also gave us a list of how to add calories to foods.

Good luck and I hope the clinic is helpful for you!

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