This post is the second in a series from an interview with Dr. Ramasamy Manikam, PhD, a clinical
psychologist and top expert on feeding disorders with over 20 years of
practice. Dr. Manikam is the Director of the Center for Pediatric Feeding Disorders at St. Mary’s Healthcare System for Children.
Compared to most of us parents, Dr. Manikam has experienced far
more challenging situations at mealtime than what we face at our own
tables. He is also a parent and grandparent. In this post, he shares his
experience and perspective for all parents, including how to deal with
“picky” eating issues such as color, texture, food jags and other common
food concerns.
First, the most important message for all of us parents is that minor
food issues — such as typical “picky” eating — are perfectly normal.
The other important advice is we shouldn’t worry so much about food that
we cause a larger problem.
“I would consider picky eating in healthy children a “normal” phase
of development, usually during transition from bottle to solids and
especially from puree to textured foods,” says Dr. Manikam. “Children
tend to ‘try’ new foods and spit them out if the food does not meet with
their interest (smell, taste, texture, color, etc.). Continued
presentation without pressure, in small amounts, and in a variety of
preparations can eliminate the problem.”
Another good thing to remember, Dr. Manikam advises, is not to get hung up on your child “having” to like any one food.
“No one food ‘has to be eaten’ unless for medical reasons,” he
explains. “If a child is healthy and is taking a variety of other foods
there is no reason to “force” the child to eat a certain food
(sometimes it is a power struggle that the parent wants to win for no
good reason).”
Food should not be a fight, Dr. Manikam, advises, which is perhaps
the best message parents could hope to hear. For those of us who deal
with the challenges of our kids’ food issues daily, however, Dr. Manikam
offers some good strategies for how to solve the issues and avoid that
conflict.
Food Jags and the Mac-and-Cheese Strike
So, what about particular issues, such as a food jags where a child
refuses to eat anything besides the Evil Trinity of fat-sugar-salt, i.e.
mac-and-cheese, fast food or chicken nuggets?
“Choose foods with similar characteristics such as color, texture,
taste, etc. to reduce the child’s resistance,” Dr. Manikam advises.
“Introduce new foods in small amounts, mix the two foods together where
possible, make the new foods interesting like making them into
interesting shapes, arrangements etc.; model eating the food with the
child; find out what about the new foods the child dislikes: e.g.,
color, taste, smell, texture, etc and manipulate these food
characteristics.”
Color Issues and the All-White Diet
Quite often, kids refuse to eat any food of a certain color, green
for example, after one negative exposure to a green food. It doesn’t
matter if the new food is juicy grapes or sweet kiwi fruit, all things
green equal broccoli. Other children may refuse any food that is not
white, beige or brown, otherwise known as the “white diet.”
Many of the same approaches for food jags, above, are also useful for a color aversion, says Dr. Manikam.
“It takes many tries to get a child to feel comfortable with new
foods. Frequent introduction of new foods because the child refuses a
food is not a good idea. Continue to introduce the same food for 16 to
20 times, experimenting with a variety of food preparations. Strong
resistance might have an underlying problem and not merely a ‘behavior’
problem and should be medically evaluated.”
Texture Issues
Texture issues, whether it is a preference for crunch or for soft
textures, can be confusing since they show up across all different
flavors and colors of foods. For kids with texture issues, Dr. Manikam
advises parents to try and evaluate the source of the issue in case it
is not just picky eating.
“Check to rule out oral-dental problems. Rule out sensory issues.
Texture fading (gradually increasing the texture of the food presented
moving from puree to thickened puree) is a strategy that works well most
of the time in the absence of oral-dental and sensory problems,” he
says.
Restless Eaters
Some of us have kids who can't seem to stay still long enough to
eat. These kids are often slumping in their chairs, getting up and
down, or won't want to eat a full meal but then say they are hungry an
hour later.
For these eaters, Dr. Manikam recommends a consistent schedule and
being aware in case there are legitimate causes of a small appetite.
“Frequent meal-time changes can be difficult for the child,” he says.
“Routine in other areas such as naps also helps mealtimes. Ensure that
the child is ‘hungry’ before meals. Do not give snacks before meals.
Feed developmentally appropriate portion sizes. Check to see if there is
a medical reason for poor appetite. Children with poor appetite might
need mini-meals (six to eight sessions a day) with gradual increase in
portion size. Children when ill or when recovering from illness cannot
consume a full meal and could use mini meals until fully recovered.”
The Separate Meal Request
Feeding a family with all different tastes can be a struggle. It’s
tempting to give into the request for separate foods — even just to get
through one difficult evening. Once this becomes a habit, some children
may insist on always being fixed a separate meal of foods they request.
What started out as an understandable quick fix solution for a busy and
stressed parent now adds to daily stress with the extra planning and
preparation of this separate meal. How do you get the whole family
eating the same meal again?
“If the child is healthy and well developed a ‘premack’ strategy can
be used (i.e., to have the child consume a bite or two of the family
food before presenting the preferred food and gradually increase the
amount of the family food); or have the child leave the table and tell
the child he/she can eat at the next meal (do not deprive the child of
other food routines between mealtimes including liquids and snacks). If
the child is not healthy or cannot afford to lose weight then food
fading (gradual introduction of small amounts), food masking (mixing and
hiding with other foods), and premack strategies can be used, ensuring
that the child gets the required calories and nutrients,” says Dr.
Manikam.
How Do We Tell if a Food is Disliked Because of Color, Texture, or Flavor?
Younger children cannot always verbalize their exact issue with a
particular dish. It doesn’t help that one recipe for carrots can taste
completely different than another recipe. How can parents of younger
children “crack the code” on why their children won’t eat a particular
food?
“One way to identify what the source of the particular food is to use
the ‘elimination’ technique, similar to identifying a food that a child
is allergic to,” says Dr. Manikam. “Change one characteristic of the
food at a time for a few meals to see if it makes a difference. Also,
identify what the common elements are amongst the food the child is
consuming and then use these elements to the refused foods.”
Stress Less. Enjoy More.
Overall, Dr. Manikam offers advises parents to remember, “Every
eating ‘quirk’ is not a feeding disorder. If the child is healthy with
normal growth trajectories the ‘feeding issues’ are overcome through
‘common-sense’ actions and time."
He also advises us to simply enjoy our food as we introduce small
bites of new foods to our children. Reintroducing a rejected food item
is a good tactic. That small bite might get eaten after a few tries —
just don’t force those bites, he says, or force your child to clean his
or her plate.
If you find yourself still tempted to worry, focus on being sure your
child’s menu is varied and provides adequate nutrition for his/her age
and developmental needs.
Many thanks to Dr. Manikam, Director of the Center for Pediatric Feeding Disorders at St. Mary’s Healthcare System for Children,
for his insights shared here. Read the first post in the series on feeding disorders and when a parent should worry.
My son has had an aversion to white, creamy foods for most of his 3 years. Although he now eats some white cheese, he won't even try sour cream, yogurt, (mashed) potatoes, etc. I think we recently made some headway with potatoes (not mashed). Funnily enough, he loves milk.
ReplyDelete