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Sensory Feeding and Parent Coaching for Children With ARFID
Sponsor: Hacettepe University
Summary
This study aims to investigate the effects of the SOS approach alone, or the SOS approach plus the OPC intervention, on children's feeding problems and feeding behaviors, as well as parents' feeding attitudes and mealtime behaviors in children diagnosed with ARFID. This randomized, single-blind, controlled trial will be conducted with children aged 3-8 years who were diagnosed with ARFID by a Child and Adolescent Psychiatrist according to DSM-V criteria and referred to an occupational therapy department. Power analysis determined the sample size to be 45 children (15 per group). Participants will be assigned to three groups using computer-assisted block randomization: Group 1: Sequential Oral Sensory (SOS) Feeding Approach alone; Group 2: SOS approach plus Occupational Performance Coaching (OPC); and Group 3: Control group (standard follow-up without intervention). The study design will utilize the Consort checklist used for randomized controlled trials. Informed consent will be obtained from participants. Pre- and post-intervention assessments will be conducted on the child's feeding behaviors, food variety, and mealtime negative behaviors, as well as parental feeding attitudes, mealtime behaviors, and stress. The study concludes that feeding interventions implemented using the SOS approach will be effective in reducing food acceptance, food variety, and mealtime negative behaviors in children with ARFID. These effects are expected to be more pronounced and sustained when Occupational Performance Coaching (OPC) is added to the SOS approach. Furthermore, positive changes in parents' feeding attitudes and strengthened parent-child interactions at mealtime are anticipated. These results will contribute to the literature on the effectiveness of using sensory-based approaches and family-based counseling in combination in interventions for ARFID. They are also expected to provide an evidence-based roadmap for occupational therapists to develop holistic intervention programs when working with children with ARFID in clinical practice.
Official title: Effects of the Sequential Oral Sensory Feeding Approach and Occupational Performance Coaching in Children With Avoidant/Restrictive Food Intake Disorder (ARFID): A Randomized Controlled Trial
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
3 Years - 8 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
45
Start Date
2026-01-15
Completion Date
2026-04-30
Last Updated
2026-02-04
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Sequential Oral Sensory (SOS) Feeding Approach
The SOS Feeding Approach is a structured, evidence-informed intervention that gradually exposes children with ARFID to food across multiple sensory dimensions, recognizing that these children often experience heightened sensitivities to textures, smells, and tastes that can trigger avoidance and distress. Unlike traditional behavioral methods that focus primarily on intake, SOS emphasizes building comfort, positive associations, and sensory tolerance before progressing to consumption. Delivered in 12 weekly 60-minute sessions by trained occupational therapists, the approach is individualized to each child's developmental stage, medical history, and swallowing safety, with foods selected accordingly. Sessions progress through a hierarchy-visual tolerance, olfactory exposure, tactile exploration, oral contact, intraoral exploration, and finally chewing and swallowing-ensuring gradual, non-coercive acceptance. By integrating sensory-motor learning with feeding, the intervention reduces m
SOS + Occupational Performance Coaching (OPC)
In the combined SOS and OPC intervention, children receive a 60-minute SOS session each week for 12 weeks, immediately followed by a 30-minute OPC session with their parents. SOS targets the child's sensory tolerance and positive engagement with food, while OPC uses a semi-structured coaching format where parents set meaningful feeding goals, analyze mealtime routines, and develop sustainable strategies with the therapist. Parents implement these strategies at home and review progress in subsequent sessions, ensuring continuous feedback and adjustment. This dual approach is distinguished by its family-centered nature, empowering parents as active agents of change, and by its integration of child-focused sensory therapy with parent coaching to reinforce improvements across home and clinical settings. By addressing both sensory challenges and parent-child dynamics, the intervention aims to reduce mealtime anxiety, expand food acceptance, strengthen parental self-efficacy, and achieve mor
Locations (1)
Hacettepe University, Department of Occupational Therapy, Pediatric Unit
Ankara, Altındağ, Turkey (Türkiye)