1 / 42

Please visit their table during the break and after the lecture!

UHCL Autism Speaker Series. Special thanks to underwriter CHRISTUS St. John Hospital. and sponsors Hegwood & Associates, P.C., Johnson Space Center Federal Credit Union, and Spectrum of Hope. Please visit their table during the break and after the lecture!.

giza
Download Presentation

Please visit their table during the break and after the lecture!

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. UHCL Autism Speaker Series Special thanks to underwriter CHRISTUS St. John Hospital and sponsors Hegwood & Associates, P.C., Johnson Space Center Federal Credit Union, and Spectrum of Hope Please visit their table during the break and after the lecture!

  2. INCREASING APPROPRIATEMEALTIME BEHAVIORS Presented by: Nicole Stiefler Kyna Savage, M.Ed. University of Houston - Clear Lake

  3. OVERVIEW OF THE PRESENTATION • Increasing food acceptance and decreasing food refusal • Importance • Assessments • Interventions • Increasing independent meal preparation behaviors • Importance • Assessments • Interventions

  4. FEEDING DISORDERS • Between 33% and 80% of children with developmental delays have a feeding disorder (Bachmeyer, 2009) • Includes food selectivity, food or liquid refusal • Other inappropriate behaviors may occur

  5. FOOD SELECTIVITY & FOOD REFUSAL • “Picky” eaters may be selective about: • Texture (e.g., crunchy, pureed, soft) • Food groups (e.g., grains, meat, sweets) • Taste (e.g., sweet, bland, spicy) • “Stubborn” eaters sometimes: • Refuse to eat enough food • Refuse to drink enough liquids • May not thrive without intervention

  6. INAPPROPRIATE BEHAVIORS • Head turning • Closing the mouth • Spitting out food or liquids • Throwing up • Running away

  7. OTHER INAPPROPRIATE BEHAVIORS • Hurting others (aggression) • Hurting themselves (self-injurious behavior) • Property destruction • Tantrums (screaming, crying, dropping to floor) • Arguing

  8. IMPORTANCE OF INTERVENTION • Health Concerns • Weight loss • Malnutrition • Developmental Concerns • Impaired mental development • Impaired physical development • Social Concerns • Social isolation • Difficulty in public settings • Family Interaction Concerns • Stress • Mental health issues

  9. GOLDEN RULE OF INTERVENTION • See a PHYSICIAN before starting intervention! • You MUST rule out potential medical causes • Dental issues • Swallowing disorders • Gastrointestinal disorders • Physical deformities • Oral motor deficiencies

  10. CAUSES OF SOME FEEDING DISORDERS • Getting out of things they do not want: • Non-preferred foods • Non-preferred mealtime environments • Getting things they want: • Attention • Toys • Preferred foods

  11. ADDRESSING FEEDING DISORDERS • What are the specific inappropriate behaviors? • What happens BEFORE the behavior? • What happens AFTER the behavior? • What should they eat? • Textures • Food groups • Specific foods • What might be an effective intervention?

  12. ASSESSMENT: FINDING THE CAUSE • Interviews with caregivers • Food diary • Antecedent-Behavior-Consequence (ABC) recording • Functional analysis • Requires training and supervision, OR • Conducted by Board Certified Behavior Analyst

  13. ABC RECORDING To get away from things they don’t want To get things they want

  14. STRENGTHEN APPROPRIATE BEHAVIORS • Reward appropriate behaviors, such as: • Tolerating presence of non-preferred food • Trying new foods • Trying new liquids • Do not reward any inappropriate behavior • No removing the non-preferred food • No access to attention • No access to preferred toys, activities, or foods

  15. WAYS TO REWARD EATING • Reward eating a non-preferred food with: • Preferred food • Preferred item or activity • Attention: Your praise and encouragement

  16. SHAPING • Reward small steps toward trying new foods: • Tolerating the presence of a new food • Touching a new food • Licking a new food • Putting a new food in mouth • Taking a bite of a new food • Swallowing a new food

  17. INCREASING INDEPENDENCE • Initially: One bite of a non-preferred food earns one bite of a preferred food Eat one carrot  Get one bite of a cookie Eat one carrot  Get 15 sec to play with Elmo • Eventually: A serving size of a non-preferred food earns one serving of a preferred food Eat serving of carrots  Get one cookie Eat serving of carrots  Watch a movie for 5 min

  18. ESCAPE PREVENTION • Non-removal of the eating utensil

  19. HOW TO PREVENT ESCAPE • Keep the spoon, fork, or food present • Even if inappropriate behavior occurs • Be prepared: • Plate with the food for entire meal • “Bite” plate for presenting one bite of food • Many forks or spoons • Reward eating with a preferred food, toy, attention, or a combination

  20. GRADUATED GUIDANCE • Increase the amount of help provided

  21. HOW TO USE GRADUATED ASSISTANCE • Use the least intrusive prompt possible: • Instruction • Gesture • Model • Partial Physical Guidance • Full Physical Guidance • Can use finger foods or foods on a utensil • Can use with escape prevention • Reinforce eating with a preferred food, toy, attention, or a combination

  22. Throwing up or Spitting out Food • Once all medical problems have been ruled out: • Throwing up or spitting out food is a behavior • Treat it the same as any other problem behavior • If your child throws up or spits out food, present more food immediately • Reinforce eating with a preferred food, toy, attention, or a combination

  23. PACKING (REFUSING TO SWALLOW) • Packing: Storing food in the cheeks and refusing to swallow • Use a spoon to redistribute food in the mouth • After allowing 10 s for chewing, give child a liquid to prompt swallowing • Reinforce swallowing with a preferred food, toy, attention, or a combination

  24. Increasing Independent Meal Preparation

  25. IMPORTANCE OF TEACHING • Promotes autonomy in young learners • Prepares older learners for independent living

  26. PRE-TEACHING CONSIDERATIONS • What are the prerequisite skills necessary for the task? • Which kitchen tools and appliances do you want your learner to use? • Are the items needed accessible to the learner?

  27. SELECTING FOOD FOR TEACHING • Choose highly preferred foods • Consider the number of steps to complete the task • Consider the amount of time and assistance that will be required

  28. GENERAL APPROACH TO TEACHING • Identify a reinforcer (reward) for task completion • Create a task analysis • Use a teaching strategy • Select an appropriate teaching time

  29. IDENTIFY THE REINFORCER (REWARD) TASKREINFORCER • Tying shoes  Play outside • Making bed  Make Mom happy & get praise • Brushing teeth  Praise & fun bedtime routine • Making a cake  Smells and tastes great!

  30. TASK ANALYSIS • Breaking a complex skill into individual steps • Use to determine which behaviors to teach • Create one by performing the task & writing down each step

  31. TASK ANALYSIS: CHOCOLATE MILK • Get a glass • Get a spoon • Get milk • Get chocolate syrup • Pour milk into glass • Pour syrup into spoon • Put spoon into glass • Stir syrup in glass • Put spoon in sink • Put syrup away

  32. TEACHING STRATEGY • Behaviors taught from the end to the beginning • Called “backward chaining” • Trainer completes all but the last step for the learner • Learner eats each time the last step is completed • After the last step is mastered, learner completes the last 2 steps • Then the last 3 steps • Continue until the learner can complete all steps • Trainer provides assistance (prompts) as needed

  33. PROMPTS USED DURING TEACHING • Visual: Pictures or written words of each step • Verbal: Tell the learner the step • Gesture/Model: Point to or demonstrate the step • Partial physical: Physically assist the learner to initiate the step • Full physical: Physically assist the learner through the entire step

  34. How to Make Chocolate Milk

  35. VISUAL PROMPTS

  36. TASK ANALYSIS: CHOCOLATE MILK • Get a glass • Get a spoon • Get milk • Get chocolate syrup • Pour milk into glass • Pour syrup into spoon • Put spoon into glass • Stir syrup in glass • Put spoon in sink • Put syrup away

  37. MODIFICATION OF TASKS • Have the learner pour from a smaller container • Modify the materials used • Use plastic cups, spoons, etc. • Make items reachable for the learner • Loosen lids

  38. HANDS-ON ACTIVITY • Create a task analysis (TA) • Peanut butter & jelly sandwich • Bowl of cereal • Teach the task to a partner • Use backward chaining data sheet

More Related