Monday, August 18, 2008

Feeding Clinic Evaluation

It's been interesting to see Faith's progress with food. We started over a year ago after she passed a swallow study (meaning they saw her swallow and protect her airway from aspiration) to offer her some baby food at meals to taste and she seemed to go up and down in her level of interest in it. Overtime we slacked off as Faith seemed less interested in putting it in her mouth instead of everywhere else. In May, while Fred was away I took Anthony and Faith out to dinner at Red Robin and gave Faith a kids cup to play with and a small piece of ice from my glass. She was having fun putting the ice in her mouth and then it disappeared - I asked her where it was and she pointed to her throat, so I figured she swallowed it (it was really small, like the half the size of a dime and melting), so I gave her more and a few more times she ran her finger down her throat indicating she had swallowed it again. She was really excited about it, so I decided to start ramping up her eating again and she really has become much more interested and I have been able to see her swallow some baby food although it is still extremely small amounts (at most, MAYBE about a teaspoon's worth). I decided to have her evaluated at Children's Hospital of Denver feeding clinic to see if there is more we could be doing to take advantage of this new event. Basically I wanted to find out if the "experts" had any ideas of new things we could be doing to help Faith start swallowing better and make sure we aren't falling any further behind on the oral eating learning curve that she will eventually have to tackle.

Before the appointment, I had to fill out and mail a bunch of paperwork with Faith's medical history, her abilities, and do a 3 day journal of everything she ate (via G-Tube or orally). Then, they asked us to bring her favorite cup, plate, spoon 2 foods she likes and something she doesn't like. They had us (Faith, me, nurse Rachel, and Kim - Faith's Speech Lang. Pathologist) sit in a room facing a one-way mirror and feed her so they could observe her behavior. She really impressed Kim, Rachel and me - she was really excited about everything, from getting things out of a bag, to actually taking a BITE out of a chewy granola bar which she has never done before (well, Rachel told me she bit a graham cracker the week before). Of course as soon as she bit it off she leaned forward and let it all fall out of her mouth because she can't really do anything with it, but we were excited just to see her so interested in it. Then she tasted some applesauce and tried to drink some water, with most of it just running out of her mouth.

Anyway, the experts came in afterwards and weren't so excited about her biting the granola bar - they were concerned that it was a choking hazard and that we shouldn't be giving her things like that. Well, like I said that was the first time I've ever seen her take a bite of anything! I didn't give it to her to try and eat it, it was just to show her level of interest in it and let her taste it. They felt Faith's interest in food was great but that we (I) might be pushing too hard. They felt like due to her jaw anatomy that she is unable to move food to the back of her mouth with her tongue and prepare to swallow it. They also didn't like it when I used an eyedropper to squirt baby food to the back of Faith's mouth to help her practice swallowing because Faith made some faces that she didn't like it. They basically said to only allow her to feed herself and to taste liquids or meltable solids until she has had her first jaw distraction/reconstruction.

For the most part I agreed with everything they had to say, although I felt like they were being overly conservative. I was glad to hear they didn't think Faith was missing out on some important therapy but I also felt like I might hear something very different from a more aggressive clinic. In the end, I'm just nervous about letting too much time go by doing very little if a more aggressive approach would make it easier for her in the future. I understand it's a delicate balance and that being too aggressive could cause her to have significant aversions when she is older, but I see her making progress and I want to encourage her to do as much as she is comfortable with.

Thanks for listening,
Robin

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Robin, I'm just trying to see if I am doing this right. Let me know if you get it. Rosemarie & Bobfkrcegu