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1.
J Pediatr Gastroenterol Nutr ; 75(3): 351-355, 2022 09 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35687655

ABSTRACT

To establish a foundation for methodologically sound research on the epidemiology, assessment, and treatment of pediatric feeding disorder (PFD), a 28-member multidisciplinary panel with equal representation from medicine, nutrition, feeding skill, and psychology from seven national feeding programs convened to develop a case report form (CRF). This process relied upon recent advances in defining PFD, a review of the extant literature, expert consensus regarding best practices, and review of current patient characterization templates at participating institutions. The resultant PFD CRF involves patient characterization in four domains (ie, medical, nutrition, feeding skill, and psychosocial) and identifies the primary features of a feeding disorder based on PFD diagnostic criteria. A corresponding protocol provides guidance for completing the assessment process across the four domains. The PFD CRF promotes a standard procedure to support patient characterization, enhance methodological rigor, and provide a useful clinical tool for providers and researchers working with these disorders.


Subject(s)
Feeding and Eating Disorders , Child , Consensus , Feeding and Eating Disorders/diagnosis , Feeding and Eating Disorders/therapy , Humans , Nutritional Status
2.
J Pediatr Gastroenterol Nutr ; 68(1): 124-129, 2019 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30358739

ABSTRACT

Pediatric feeding disorders (PFDs) lack a universally accepted definition. Feeding disorders require comprehensive assessment and treatment of 4 closely related, complementary domains (medical, psychosocial, and feeding skill-based systems and associated nutritional complications). Previous diagnostic paradigms have, however, typically defined feeding disorders using the lens of a single professional discipline and fail to characterize associated functional limitations that are critical to plan appropriate interventions and improve quality of life. Using the framework of the World Health Organization International Classification of Functioning, Disability, and Health, a unifying diagnostic term is proposed: "Pediatric Feeding Disorder" (PFD), defined as impaired oral intake that is not age-appropriate, and is associated with medical, nutritional, feeding skill, and/or psychosocial dysfunction. By incorporating associated functional limitations, the proposed diagnostic criteria for PFD should enable practitioners and researchers to better characterize the needs of heterogeneous patient populations, facilitate inclusion of all relevant disciplines in treatment planning, and promote the use of common, precise, terminology necessary to advance clinical practice, research, and health-care policy.


Subject(s)
Feeding and Eating Disorders/classification , Gastroenterology/standards , Pediatrics/standards , Child , Child Nutrition Sciences/standards , Child Nutritional Physiological Phenomena , Consensus , Humans , International Classification of Diseases , International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health , World Health Organization
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