


New article: Use of an Exit Criterion for a Clinical Paediatric Feeding Case in-Home
My latest research has been published with @SpringerNature in the Journal of Developmental and Physical Disabilities. This article provides a clinical example of how to systematically assess food preferences, use the results before and during treatment to carefully...
50 days of free full text access: “Increasing food texture and teaching chewing for a clinical case within the home setting in Australia”
Highlights •We taught chewing in-home in 3 weeks for a 5-year-old with no chewing history. •We used solely behaviour-analytic treatment with some novel/variant components not in the literature. •He reached a variety of 109 foods across the food groups and a full plate...
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)…”

New accepted article: “The distance between empirically-supported treatment and actual practice for paediatric feeding problems: An international clinical perspective”
by Drs. Sarah Taylor & Tessa Taylor Click for Full Text Proof Figure 2.The top panel shows the number of studies identified in the literature search, by treatment approach. The bottom panel shows the frequency of children that accessed each approach prior to...New in Advance Access
New in Advance Access: For youth with feeding concerns, case studies demonstrate the feasibility and benefits of the "side deposit" technique https://t.co/mTbkPXGEvY — Journal of Pediatric Psychology (@JPedPsych) March 6,...
New Article: “Assessment and Treatment of Pica Within the Home Setting in Australia”
Taylor-2020-Pica-Australia-Proofs-FinalDownload © 2020, American Psychological Association. This paper is not the copy of record and may not exactly replicate the final, authoritative version of the article. Please do not copy or cite without authors’...
New Article: “Side deposit with regular texture food for clinical cases in-home”
Click here to check it out!
New article: In-home treatment of ARFID for a teenager with typical development
There have been recent reports of teenagers becoming blind due to poor diets as well as the return of conditions like scurvy in developed countries. However, there is already a well-established empirically supported treatment for ARFID with decades of research backing. This new article shows this solely behavior-analytic treatment working for a 13-year-old in a home setting.

50 free eprints! “Intensive paediatric feeding treatment and the use of a side deposit for a clinical case within the home setting in Australia”
First publication in Australia