Behavior Management: Behavioral management procedures systematically apply positive and negative consequences contingent on specific child behaviors. Behavior management procedures consist of techniques based on learning principles that can be applied to problems to strengthen adaptive behaviors and weaken maladaptive behaviors. Of particular interest in clinical feeding interventions are 1) aspects of the feeder’s responses that have an inadvertent affects on feeding patterns and 2) planned techniques for “unlearning” or modifying maladaptive feeding patterns by rearranging social and environmental consequences for feeding. Behavior management techniques have been particularly recommended for problems related to food selectivity, mealtime conduct problems, and delays in self-feeding, as opposed to problems with quantity of intake which may be more affected by appetitive variables.
Background Education for Providers Considerable evidence supports the use of behavioral approaches in the treatment of feeding disorders. Behavioral treatment goals generally consist of (1) decreasing behavioral problems at meals; (2) decreasing parent stress at meals; (3) increasing pleasurable parent-child interactions at meals; (4) increasing oral intake or variety of oral foods; (4) advancing texture (e.g. moving from purees and smooth foods to chewable solids); and (5) increasing the structure and routine of meals. Behavioral treatment strategies include implementation of mealtime structure and a feeding schedule, appetite manipulation, behavior management, and parent training. Ongoing consultation with other specialists, especially a dietician and speech pathologist, is frequently necessary to monitor the safety of the therapeutic plan that can result in transient weight loss, or that may unmask oral motor or swallowing deficits as behavioral resistance to feeding begins to resolve.
The essential elements of behavior management are (1) to identify the targeted behavior for change; (2) select techniques to increase or decrease behaviors congruent with feeding goals; and (3) develop a treatment plan that consistently pairs a contingency (positive or negative) with the targeted behavior. Strategies to increase positive behaviors include use of positive and negative reinforcement and discrimination training. To reduce negative behaviors, treatments typically include extinction, satiation, punishment, and desensitization. Typically, behavioral strategies are used in combination to create the strongest treatment effects in the shortest period of time.
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Instructions for Provider
Principles to INCREASE behavior
Principles to DECREASE Behavior