Food
preferences in children, as
with adults, are a normal
phenomenon. Picky or
selective eating in children
and adults are not
representative of simple
food preferences, however,
but of neurological hard
wiring problems that could
possibly indicate an autism
spectrum syndrome, or
certain types of non-verbal
learning disabilities and
sensory integration
disorders. Children with
sensory problems tend to be
hypersensitive to tastes,
smells, and textures in the
mouth, and may refuse food,
gag or vomit as a typical
response. Picky eating could
potentially foreshadow
obsessive compulsive
disorder, phobias or other
extreme forms of anxiety. In
some instances, these
conditions may follow
premature birth and early
intubation, or other trauma
around eating, digestion,
and the functioning of the
mouth.
Question:
“Should I offer my child an
alternative dinner if she
doesn’t like what the family
is eating?”
Answer: There are no
hard and fast rules when it
comes to parents and
children; parents need to
assess each situation for
its unique quality, and to
trust their instincts in
response. It also helps if
both parents give the child
the same message by
providing a “united front.”
Here are a few guidelines
to keep in mind in
approaching this issue:
First, try to comprehend
what your child’s request
might signify.
The child who is
generally a healthy,
flexible eater who sits with
a plateful of healthy course
items but who has a
particular dislike for one
particular food served may
occasionally substitute a
protein for a protein, a
complex carbohydrate for a
complex carbohydrate, if
only now and then. The
exchange should be simple,
easy and facilitated by the
child (substituting a scoop
of cottage cheese or tuna
salad for the protein
course.)
If this
request resounds
consistently during most
mealtimes and if the child
refuses to eat whatever the
family is eating, this child
may possibly be picky eater.
It might also be a control
device or the child’s
attempt to draw attention to
herself, though it is
important to understand that
the child who cries, gags,
and exhibits fear, or who
refuses to eat even if he or
she must go hungry as a
result, this child is
probably not just
opinionated, stubborn and
willful, but is most likely
a picky eater.
If the child
is refusing foods that
contain certain fats or
sugars or that are calorie
dense, that might lead a
parent to consider whether
this might be an early
warning sign of the onset of
food restriction or an
eating dysfunction. It might
be helpful to discuss with
the child his or her
motivation in demanding such
a compromise.
If the
child is not hungry at
dinner because he or she has
eaten a snack too close to
dinner time, this is
something that must be noted
and avoided in future
situations. This may be more
a matter of eating lifestyle
and food planning.
If you determine that your
child might be a picky
eater, you will need to
solicit professional help
for the child, and for
yourself and family, in
managing the condition and
the anxiety that naturally
arises from it around
mealtimes.
If a child is a picky
eater, the first priority is
to provide nourishment upon
which to grow. Beware that
by offering only the child’s
few food preferences,
parents may be missing a
prime opportunity to expand
the diversity of the child’s
palate, and food repertoire,
all of which will have
consequences later in life.
Parents need to be teachers
as well as mentors.
To optimize a child’s
palate, parents do well to
expose their children to a
wide variety of foods,
tastes, smells and textures
within the two years of
life. Sometimes a parent
might need to offer the same
food as many as ten times
before the child will
consider trying it. If a
child is deprived of
important nutrients, parents
needs to supplement the
child’s diet with Pediasure
and vitamins.
Picky
eating syndrome is a problem
that is chemically and
neurologically based.
Anxiety and unpleasantness
at mealtimes become givens
in the case of the picky
eating child.
Develop a system for
recognizing and handling
meal-time crises, making
every effort to offset their
effects while helping the
child learn to overcome his
or her fear of certain
foods. Picky eating
represents an eating
life style.
When the child’s
eating life style includes a
regular diet of fear,
alleviating that fear must
become a first priority.
Helping siblings deal with
the chaos and discomfort is
still another task for
parents.
Parents can expect to
discover in some cases that
eating behaviors at dinner
might be representative of
similar responses in other
life spheres. The child who
cannot adjust to new foods
may be generally unable to
adjust to and accommodate
change, unfamiliarity and
discomfort in other contexts
as well. Any behaviors that
take on the quality of
excess, rigidity, ritualism
or compulsion are most
likely rooted in anxiety.
As a rule of thumb, dysfunctional eating behaviors may
in some ways represent the
tip of a behavioral iceberg,
a metaphor for how a child
thinks, behaves, and views
the world.