Just a quick post for those of you who are local- this looks like a great conference. November 14, 2014 CONFERENCE DESCRIPTION The Annual Southeastern Neonatal/Pediatric Nutrition Conference is designed to provide updated, advanced and practical approaches to contemporary issues in pediatric and neonatal nutrition. This activity will provide unique opportunities to learn, share and Keep Reading >>
Article Highlight: children’s eating patterns
Children's eating patterns seem set in infancy Healthful eating early in life pays dividends later CBC News Posted: Sep 02, 2014 3:02 PM ETLast Updated: Sep 02, 2014 10:16 PM ET Interesting article about a recent supplement of the Journal Pediatrics which included 11 U.S. government funded studies that tracked the eating patterns of about 1,500 individuals. Highlights Keep Reading >>
Lessons from the Best: Supporting Your Fellow Therapists by Melanie Potock, MA, CCC-SLP
When Krisi asked me to write something for her blog about feeding therapy, I thought about all the various aspects of helping kids to eat: the physiological and/or medical concerns, the sensory piece, the motor skills and the learned behaviors. But what keeps popping into my head are the lessons I learned from many expert clinicians, like Krisi. (She’s turning red right now, but let me Keep Reading >>
WHAT BABY FOOD JARS DON’T TELL YOU ABOUT INTRODUCING FOODS Diane Bahr, MS, CCC-SLP, Feeding Specialist
The Problem Parents often receive little instruction about “when and how to introduce foods and liquids” to their babies. They mostly rely on their pediatricians who give them the best information they have during “well baby” visits. Then parents turn to family and friends who themselves have limited knowledge and experience. Baby food manufacturers also place minimal guidelines on their Keep Reading >>
The Failure to Thrive Pediatric Feeding Disorders by Cathleen Piazza, Ph.D. and Jennifer Dawson, M.A.
I want to thank Dr. Piazza for giving permission to repost this article.It was originally printed in Paradigm Magazine, • Fall 2000, pg. 8-9. It's one of my favorites. Krisi “Don’t worry, she’ll eat when she gets hungry” is the common assumption of most practitioners working with pediatric populations. Even though this adage applies to the majority of infants and toddlers, there is a Keep Reading >>
The Other Reason So Many Kids Are Picky Eaters By Kelly Dorfman, M.S., L.N.D. http://www.kellydorfman.com/home.html
http://www.kellydorfman.com/home.html Posted on April 8, 2013 – Huffington Post "It is really weird," Colin's mother reported. "He will like and eat something for weeks and then suddenly say that it tastes bad or it is making him sick. He has to be making that up, right?" Massey's mom had a different experience with her 9-year-old restrictive eater. "She ate asparagus or Keep Reading >>
Feeding Clinic Development
Question: I am developing an outpatient feeding clinic to become more interdisciplinary. When you do a feeding evaluation on a child for the first time, what professionals are usually involved? I received this question and thought it would make a good blog post on how to do an interdisciplinary feeding evaluation as well as develop a feeding team. I haven't posted many blogs from a personal Keep Reading >>
What SLPs Need to Know About the Medical Side of Pediatric Feeding
Please check out the blog I wrote for ASHA (The American Speech and Hearing Association)! http://blog.asha.org/2014/06/03/what-slps-need-to-know-about-the-medical-side-of-pediatric-feeding/ Keep Reading >>
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