Feeding Forward: From Fussy to Foodie

Serving up paediatric feeding insights to progress from picky to plating:

Little bites, big leaps

Stirring up clinical research, in-depth case studies, and practical guides, a curated information hub and treasure trove distilling years of dedicated study and firsthand experience into actionable knowledge, designed to be a go-to resource for caregivers, clinicians, and researchers. We strive to empower those navigating paediatric feeding challenges with cutting-edge knowledge that fuels innovation and transforms care. #GumbeauxYaYa #CaC’estBon #AllonsManger #Bam!

This information is provided for reference only. The content is not intended to advertise specific outcomes or create unreasonable expectations. Therapeutic decisions should be made in consultation with a registered health practitioner. Information provided is not a substitute for professional medical advice. 

Explore Our Content

Organised into accessible sections, whether you’re exploring featured insights, diving into publications, accessing practical resources, or engaging with leading presentations, each category offers a deeper understanding of the application of evidence-based strategies.

Research

Dive into the gateway to our latest peer-reviewed literature on paediatric feeding.

Stay informed with our comprehensive reviews and detailed commentary on the work and research excellence that laid the groundwork for evidence-based practice in feeding.

Explore in-depth clinical analyses on feeding interventions.

Packed with a wealth of user-friendly guides, downloadable materials, and practical overviews, breaking down complex challenges into tangible support for identifying and addressing day-to-day feeding challenges.

Curated from years of hands-on experience and study, these tools empower parents, professionals, and investigators alike seeking to improve feeding outcomes. 

Featuring engaging lectures, conference talks, and webinar recordings on feeding evaluation and strategies.

Multi-media content born from expertise on translating research into real-world application. 

Stay inspired by engaging with dynamic content on the latest advances in feeding therapies. 

 

Highlighted Insights

Featured & Latest Content

Discover our curated selection of essential reads that provide invaluable insights into paediatric feeding. These articles are handpicked for their relevance and impact, showcasing key topics and innovative solutions, exemplifying the transformative work in advancing paediatric feeding science and practice.

Intensive Tube Weaning Programme, Paediatric Feeding/ARFID Therapy Clinic

the Blend mag 4: Why is ARFID 🍝 having a moment 🐝🔥📈💡🤔🔍? ARFID Explained.

You’re not alone. You may hear that children will grow out of it, eat if hungry, are fine if they’re not underweight, or are not ready for feeding intervention. But research suggests this is not the case and, in fact, the problems can worsen over time.
Feeding difficulties are complex and people need the right help – and this support is available. It can work quickly and have rippling positive effects into other areas for the person and their loved ones.

Collaboration across 4 clinics in 3 countries, beyond happy ☺️ & grateful 🙏 for the opportunity to team up🫛🥕with Drs. Phipps, Peterson, & S.A. Taylor! Everything you ever wanted to know about social validity in feeding:

“Collectively, caregivers rated behaviour-analytic treatments high in social validity and treatments were highly effective. Caregivers reported increased broader quality of life and lasting positive impacts, decreased stress, and lack of negative effects.”
“Accurate dissemination is needed to increase earlier access to effective feeding treatment for families and specialised training for professionals to promote data-based and individualised decision-making in this vital area.”

“Open…close…FUN!” 🥢 🍣 New free full-text article “Mealtime skill independence: From pouch-to-spoon fading to using chopsticks”

11 skills in just 2 weeks! Took tedious hard work, but he eventually was a little chopstick expert, even with small vitamins. Another one of my favourite/tippie-top treatment arrangements, plus important novel cultural caregiver perspectives shared including on social validity.

New free full-text article “Incorporating social validity into practice: Treatment progression across pediatric feeding skill domains”

On multimodal social validity assessment (including direct objective recipient measures) with heaps of practical implications, and one of my most preferred/tippie top/fun treatment arrangements and data collection keys to add (h = happy) ever. Variety record 224 🥇

New free full text review article packed with resources: Reporting Treatment Processes and Outcomes

Reviews novel important details on the processes and outcomes involved in empirically-supported treatment for paediatric feeding disorders/ARFID/tube weaning
Jam packed with resources!
Top-Read Papers! “Interested in catching up on some of the most engaging papers from EJOBA in 2023?…

THE BLEND mag 3! Two experts share their advice on making the transition from tube-feeding to oral eating. In

What’s most touching is seeing so many ‘firsts’ – not only during the tube weaning program, but in updates from the families after. With all the complexity and hard work that goes into it, it’s so rewarding to finally see a child…

Progressing from tube feeding to eating (i.e., tube weaning) with paediatric feeding therapy: What works? by Dr. Sarah Ann Taylor

“Our review focused on looking at the evidence across different treatment options for transitioning children from tube feeding to eating (commonly known as tube weaning).” “Behavioural treatments reported significant gains in oral consumption and improvement in mealtime behaviours but there were less reports of children being tube weaned. Behavioural studies often involved children with very complex and severe feeding difficulties, and many had DD.” “A high level of treatment intensity is needed, at least over a few weeks. This involves multiple meals per day, over consecutive days.”

New Australian Autism Handbook in print! Check out our chapter: Eating: The big issues: Sleeping, toilet training, and eating.

New edition of the Australian Autism Handbook is finally available in print! Beyond grateful to have had the opportunity to take part in “Eating” in: “The Big Issues: Sleeping, Toilet Training, and Eating” with Dr. Sarah Leadley Taylor. Thanks a million and congrats to Benison O’Reilly and Seana Smith!
“A fully updated edition of the widely praised and most trusted Australian guide on how to raise a child with autism spectrum disorder.” “Advice from leading world experts delivers the information you can TRUST.”

New article: Social Validity of Paediatric Feeding Treatment across Goals, Processes, and Outcomes

Surprisingly, despite its importance and attention given in discussion currently in our field, supporting data and research are very much lacking. Data are needed in paediatric feeding to help accurately disseminate this highly important, effective, acceptable, and valued treatment, increasing access to treatment for families in need to improve their quality of life, and increasing opportunities for training/education for professionals. This is the first report to our knowledge to analyse social validity data comprehensively across variables such as participant characteristics, goals, treatment processes, treatment components, and outcomes. Ratings were high across the board (4.8 & 4.9 out of 5). Check out the results/graphs/tables! Future research could get caregiver input to design assessments, and use methods to analyse open-ended data (as in Anderson et al., 2021), in addition to the extensions to this work in Taylor & Taylor 2022b.

New JABA article: Taylor & Lanovaz (2022): Agreement between visual inspection and objective analysis methods: A replication and extension

I was trained separately on group statistics and visual inspection of single-case experimental design, but not trained on objective supplements for visual inspection. After much searching I found this novel approach (machine learning/artificial intelligence) by Dr. Marc Lanovaz that is being used in many other fields such as medicine. This method could improve accuracy of decision making, training efficiency, and communicability/quantification of results.

What Works in Paediatric Feeding? Our Publication Featured by the Association for Science in Autism Treatment: Research Synopsis

“In this month’s issue, Sheila Klick, MEd, BCBA and Dr. Mary Jane Weiss, highlight the importance of carefully searching for and selecting, evidence-based treatment options when children are experiencing feeding issues. While reviewing research by Taylor & Taylor (2021), the authors describe how current recommendations may not align with current research, and how parents can beware of adverse reactions to these treatment options.” The distance between empirically-supported treatment and actual practice for paediatric feeding problems

Full text: Controlled case series demonstrates how parents can be trained to treat paediatric feeding disorders at home

Author perspectives: “This is the most excited I have ever been about an article. I love the colourful pictures of real food the kids actually ate to show real life and easily relatable proof of the results…In the graphs, you can still see each kid’s individual results instead of being lumped into the group and how big the change was for each kid. This was three years of my own hands-on personal direct close hard work with each kid and family in their homes, rather than a large hospital with lots of teams and supervising staff. It is an entirely different special experience, especially seeing the huge impact on the families’ lives (seeing the kids eat with their siblings and family, at restaurants, at school)…”

Check out the PUMP e-Newsletter for all things home tube feeding! 🙏 for having us as a Featured Colleague

Check out the PUMP e-Newsletter for all things home tube feeding! 🙏 for having us as a Featured Colleague

We surface #micronutrients, a trusted colleague Tessa Taylor, PhD, BCBA-D, and a warm online tubie community.
Welcome to PUMP! Every fortnight we will bring you information about all things home tube feeding. You will hear from people who have lived experience, about services and products designed to ease life with a feeding tube, new research in the area, and more.

read more
Presentation for Children’s Developmental & Intervention Center (CDIC) of Lipa (Philippines) with Dr. Tanaka: “From Tube Feeding to Eating: Empirically-Supported Treatment for Paediatric Feeding Disorders.”

Presentation for Children’s Developmental & Intervention Center (CDIC) of Lipa (Philippines) with Dr. Tanaka: “From Tube Feeding to Eating: Empirically-Supported Treatment for Paediatric Feeding Disorders.”

Taylor, T. (2023, March). From Tube Feeding to Eating: Empirically-Supported Treatment for Paediatric Feeding Disorders. Invited presentation presented at the Children's Developmental and Intervention Center of Lipa, Philippines. Scroll below for photos! About the author...

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New article: Machine Learning to Support Visual Inspection of Data: A Clinical Application

New article: Machine Learning to Support Visual Inspection of Data: A Clinical Application

I love data analysis and graphing. I was trained separately on group statistics and single-case experimental design, but not trained on objective supplements for visual inspection of single-case designs. After much searching I finally found this novel approach (machine learning/artificial intelligence) that is being used in many other fields such as medicine (e.g., data-driven COVID-19 care at Johns Hopkins).

read more
New Australian Autism Handbook in print! Check out our chapter: Eating: The big issues: Sleeping, toilet training, and eating.

New Australian Autism Handbook in print! Check out our chapter: Eating: The big issues: Sleeping, toilet training, and eating.

New edition of the Australian Autism Handbook is finally available in print! Beyond grateful to have had the opportunity to take part in “Eating” in: “The Big Issues: Sleeping, Toilet Training, and Eating” with Dr. Sarah Leadley Taylor. Thanks a million and congrats to Benison O’Reilly and Seana Smith!
“A fully updated edition of the widely praised and most trusted Australian guide on how to raise a child with autism spectrum disorder.” “Advice from leading world experts delivers the information you can TRUST.”

read more
ausEE’s Allied Health Professions Day Spotlight

ausEE’s Allied Health Professions Day Spotlight

Today is Allied Health Professions Day (14 October 2022). Please join us in celebrating and thanking AHPs who include dietitians, occupational therapists, psychologists and speech pathologists for the valuable work they do.
We are putting the spotlight on psychologists, Jessica Gowans, Tessa Taylor, PhD, BCBA-D and Dr. Sarah Leadley, who kindly volunteered their time to provide information videos that ausEE shared as part of this year’s Feeding Tube Awareness Week ‘Virtual Education Program’.
Psychologists, Dr Tessa Taylor and Dr Sarah Leadley presented their research on childhood feeding difficulties and experience with home-based interventions in Australia and New Zealand to help children with tube dependence learn to eat new foods and progress with feeding skills.
Jessica Gowans, a psychologist and tubie parent shared tips, information and resources on how to look after yourself as a tubie parent/carer.

read more
What Works in Paediatric Feeding? Our Publication Featured by the Association for Science in Autism Treatment: Research Synopsis

What Works in Paediatric Feeding? Our Publication Featured by the Association for Science in Autism Treatment: Research Synopsis

“In this month’s issue, Sheila Klick, MEd, BCBA and Dr. Mary Jane Weiss, highlight the importance of carefully searching for and selecting, evidence-based treatment options when children are experiencing feeding issues. While reviewing research by Taylor & Taylor (2021), the authors describe how current recommendations may not align with current research, and how parents can beware of adverse reactions to these treatment options.” The distance between empirically-supported treatment and actual practice for paediatric feeding problems

read more

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Founder of of Paediatric Feeding International https://www.paediatricfeedingintl.com/about-us/

Dr. Tessa Taylor

Clinical Psychologist (PhD, FCCLP), Behaviour Analyst (BCBA-D), Te Whare Wānanga o Waitaha | University of Canterbury

TOPICS

paediatric feeding disorder (PFD) | avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder (ARFID) | gastrostomy tube/G-tube, nasogastric tube/NG-tube | tube weaning/dependency, transition from tube to oral | failure to thrive/faltering growth/growth impairment | nutritional deficiencies | inappropriate mealtime behaviour (IMB) | food refusal/selectivity | fussy/picky/selective eater/eating | oral/eating/food aversion/sensitivities | mealtime independence/skills | gagging, coughing, vomiting | temperature/preparation/brand/colour/cutlery/crockery selectivity | setting/time/feeder selectivity | out of seat (not sitting at table) | caregiver stress, dreading mealtimes | constipation | dehydration | low appetite/skipping meals, grazing | applied behaviour analysis (ABA) | behaviour-analytic/behavioural treatment/therapy/support/services | in-home therapy/translation | autism, developmental delay, intellectual disability | premie/prematuriy/premature birth | food allergy | reflux