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Writer's pictureRehan Naser

What Should You Do If You See Your Child Is Having Trouble Eating?

When you notice your child has trouble eating, or swallowing disorders, it’s natural you would be feeling sad thinking that this might not happen to your child. However, there is no reason to worry, there is child feeding therapy that can your child how to progress through the developmental process of learning to eat a variety of foods.


For children with special needs such as Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD), Down syndrome, or Sensory Processing Disorder (SPD), or the “picky eater” syndrome, feeding therapy for toddlers can help establish eating and drinking behavior right in children.





Child feeding therapy is a treatment for children who are having difficulties in feeding and swallowing food and drinks. They take only a limited variety or a very small quantity of food and drink or show specific mealtime behavior. That is not age-appropriate. Feeding therapy specialists evaluate your child for feeding issues and help your child in improving habits and attributes that include making the muscles of the mouth stronger, training them on how to properly chew and swallow food particles, increasing tongue movement, acceptance of different foods and liquids, coordination with the suck-swallow-breath pattern, and ensuring safe swallowing by altering food textures and liquid thickness, among others.


Feeding therapy is a developmental process and takes time. When a child has difficulty eating, it means they have stalled in the middle of learning a new skill. Regardless of their age, the child feeding therapy specialists will begin to teach the step-by-step process wherever they are having trouble eating or chewing as a means to reaching the long-term goal of independent, healthy eating.


That said, children with trouble eating and drinking behavior have got the solution that can help them overcome it. And as a parent, you can see your child behaving as a normal child while eating and drinking.


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