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Thursday, May 23, 2013

Feeding Clinic in Bay Area Evaluation

What to know when looking for a feeding therapist/specialist for your child:
When seeking help for your child with a feeding disorder it is very important to make sure the therapist/specialists are a licensed and or certified professional.  Being a BCBA (Board Certified Behavioral Analyst) is of extreme importance when looking for a feeding therapist working with an emphasis in behavior analysis (Occupational Therapists and Speech and Language Pathologists will of course carry their own certifications/licenses).  This certification holds them to specific standards in the field of applied behavior analysis, whether disciplinary standards, ethical standards or any of the like, you can visit the BCBA website to find out how being board certified is a must when looking for behavioral feeding treatment for your child.  If the therapist is not a BCBA, the other licensing/membership to look for is a APA membership (American Psychological Association) - this makes you a licensed psychologist and also holds said member to specific guidelines and regulations.  Be sure to do your own homework - there is never an excuse to dismiss proper professional certification/licensing. Ask the question.

Start of my review:

Today we took Abby into a feeding clinic in the Bay Area for an evaluation.  I pulled into the parking lot, took a look around and didn't quite know what to think.  The clinic was in the middle of an older looking plaza type strip..almost grungy looking, and the door to the clinic says "Please Remove Shoes" - huh, is this for reals?  

Once inside, the heaters on pretty heavy (ugh here come the hot flashes!), and no one is in the room. There are two doors but none that say "Come in" or "We'll be with you shortly"...nothing... ugh, okay I guess I'll just um..stand here.  At least inside it looks pretty kid friendly, and freshly clean (okay now I see why they want you to remove your shoes!), definitely much nicer inside than outside!

At about 3pm, the feeding specialist walks through one of the doors, we tell him who we are and he hands us some paperwork to fill out, then turns back around and goes back through mystery door number 2.  There's a lot of papers... whatever sign away!  Before I can finish filling out all the pages (theres about 10+!) he comes back out and starts to ask some questions, most of which I was just answering in the paperwork!  

After we finish answering some questions he says it's time for me to feed her so he can see what she does.  Well guess what, Abby decides to eat like it's no big deal...of course this happens!! We gave her some strawberry greek yogurt which she ate great (this never happens!), we gave her some baby food peaches, which she never eats, and she ate a little, then we gave her some baby food sweet potatoe and she pushed it away... so he did get to see a little glimpse of her behavior but not much.  As I was feeding her, we asked him more questions, and to be honest, it was at this point that we both knew this was not the place for us.  I asked him how they address children who have sensory issues/aversions to food, whether by taste or texture or temperature, and his response was "I don't know what that is?" then I said, "You mean you've been doing this for how long and you've never heard of a Sensory disorder?" and he says "I have heard of it, but I don't believe in it." Ok..... mmmm, I think that's our queue!

Another thing that had us unsure of this clinic for Abby was that they work with the child in a separate room, away from the parent.  The parent gets to watch what's going on through a TV in the lobby.  Not sure we felt comfortable with that, putting our child in someone else's hands to feed, especially when she's already so fearful/averted to eating, and just sitting back and watching.  

We were pretty bummed with the whole experience but we know God has a plan. 

That's it for now... 

Good Night!

3 comments:

  1. I'm so glad I found your blog! Also good to hear about experiences from different clinics! Wow...just wow. I would say MOST of the children I work with do have sensory processing difficulties that are hindering progress and are the root to so many feeding issues. So many have underlying medical challenges, sometimes just a reflux history that has led to so many feeding aversions and sensory disturbances.....either way I hope you find the right place!!! Check out my blog at www.pickytots.blogspot.com and feeding support page on Facebook. Www.facebook.com/pedfeed. I look forward to reading your blog!! Kristina

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  2. Are there other clinics in the Bay Area similar to clinic 4 kids?

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  3. Are there other clinics in the Bay Area similar to clinic 4 kids?

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