独立用餐技能:从用餐袋到用餐勺再到使用筷子

IF 1.5 4区 医学 Q2 EDUCATION, SPECIAL Journal of Developmental and Physical Disabilities Pub Date : 2024-05-09 DOI:10.1007/s10882-024-09968-2
Tessa Taylor
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引用次数: 0

摘要

与固体食物相比,针对液体、药物和独立技能(如叉子、筷子)的儿科喂养研究较少。据我们所知,目前还没有研究报道过从挤压式 "婴儿食品 "袋过渡、增加手指喂养以及教授舀、啜和咬碎食物的步骤。我们详细介绍了一个临床病例,并通过多元素和多基线设计描绘了教授全面进餐时间独立性的数据。一名患有儿科喂养障碍、回避/限制性食物摄入障碍(ARFID)和自闭症谱系障碍(3 级)的 3 岁男童只有一项独立技能(用嘴舀酸奶)。他不会用手指喂食、用勺子喂食、自己喝水或用杯子喝水。他参加了为期两周的家庭行为分析强化治疗项目。我们对新颖的小袋过渡装置进行了评估比较,然后使用小袋到勺子的渐变来教他用勺子自行喂食。我们教他学会独立用手指喂食、开杯喝水和四种给药方法,然后是开杯啜饮、自我舀水、咬碎食物、用叉子和筷子(11 项技能)。他 100%达到了目标。护理人员报告说,该项目具有很高的社会有效性和相关的文化意义信息,所取得的成果在随访中得到了推广和保持。
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Mealtime Skill Independence: from Pouch-to-Spoon Fading to Using Chopsticks

Compared to solids, less paediatric feeding research has targeted liquids, medication, and teaching independence skills (e.g., fork, chopsticks). No research to our knowledge has reported transitioning from spout squeeze ‘baby food’ pouches, increasing finger-feeding, and teaching steps in scooping, sipping, and biting off portions. We detail a clinical case and depict data teaching comprehensive mealtime independence using multi-element and multiple-baseline designs. A 3-year-old male with paediatric feeding disorder, avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder (ARFID), and autism spectrum disorder (level 3) had only one independent skill (yogurt pouch via spout). He did not finger-feed, self-spoon-feed, self-drink, or cup-drink. He participated in a home-based intensive 2-week behaviour-analytic treatment programme. We conducted an assessment comparing novel pouch transition apparatuses, then used pouch-to-spoon fading to teach spoon self-feeding. We taught independence in finger-feeding, open-cup drinking, and four methods of medication administration, then open-cup bolus sipping, self-scooping, biting off portions, fork, and chopsticks (11 skills). He met 100% of goals. Caregivers reported high social validity and relevant culturally significant information, and gains generalised and maintained in follow-up.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
5.60%
发文量
54
期刊介绍: The Journal of Developmental and Physical Disabilities is an interdisciplinary forum for the publication of original research and clinical reports from a variety of fields serving persons with developmental and physical disabilities. Submissions from researchers, clinicians, and related professionals in the fields of psychology, rehabilitation, special education, kinesiology, counseling, social work, psychiatry, nursing, and rehabilitation medicine are considered. Investigations utilizing group comparisons as well as single-case experimental designs are of primary interest. In addition, case studies that are of particular clinical relevance or that describe innovative evaluation and intervention techniques are welcome. All research and clinical reports should contain sufficient procedural detail so that readers can clearly understand what was done, how it was done, and why the strategy was selected. Rigorously conducted replication studies utilizing group and single-case designs are welcome irrespective of results obtained. In addition, systematic reviews, meta-analyses, and theoretical discussions that contribute substantially to understanding the problems and strengths of persons with developmental and physical disabilities are considered for publication. Authors are encouraged to preregister empirical studies, replications, systematic reviews, and meta-analyses in a relevant public database and to include such information with their submission to the journal. Authors are also encouraged, where possible and applicable, to deposit data that support the findings of their research in a public repository (see detailed “Research Data Policy” module in the journal’s Instructions for Authors). In response to the need for increased clinical and research endeavors with persons with developmental and physical disabilities, the journal is cross-categorical and unbiased methodologically.
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