Compared behavior problems, child developmental skills, home environment, and parent emotional distress for 50 families of children aged 11-70 months with differing etiologies of feeding disorders (FD). Results showed that psycho-social functioning differed across FD classifications. Children with nonorganic characteristics to FD had more behavior problems compared to those with only organic FD. Children with primarily or only organic FD displayed lower devel-opmental skills and their parents had higher emotional distress than children with primarily nonorganic FD. High parent distress was associated with older children who had poor feeding skills, less positive disciplinary practices, and higher social status. The findings imply that clini...
Feeding disorders are common in disabled children, and family reactions are critical factors influen...
Objective: To evaluate over time feeding behavior and emotional-behavioral functioning in a sample o...
Objective: The aim of this study was to examine the differences among three subtypes of feeding diso...
Few studies have examined the relative impact of co-occurring child characteristics on problematic f...
The feeding of young children is fundamentally a relational and multisystemic process. Successful tr...
DIAGNOSTIC SUBTYPES OF FEEDING DISORDERS IN INFANCY: AN EMPIRICAL CONTRIBUTION ON MOTHER-CHILD FEEDI...
OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to examine the differences among three subtypes of feeding dis...
OBJECTIVE: Children with feeding problems often have multiple co-occurring medical and developmental...
The literature on food intake disorder (ARFID) in early childhood has evidenced psychopathologic di...
This study examined the relationship between parent's feeding practices and the feeding behavio...
Objective: The aim of this study was to examine the differences among three subtypes of feeding diso...
Objectives:The primary aim of this study was to describe and compare the clinical characteristics of...
Researches in the field of Developmental Psychopathology have underlined that maternal psychopatholo...
THE POST-TRAUMATIC FEEDING DISORDER IN INFANCY: A COMPARISON OF THREE DIFFERENT DEVELOPMENTAL PATH...
Objectives: To evaluate the effects of age and the presence of feeding pathologies on the relational...
Feeding disorders are common in disabled children, and family reactions are critical factors influen...
Objective: To evaluate over time feeding behavior and emotional-behavioral functioning in a sample o...
Objective: The aim of this study was to examine the differences among three subtypes of feeding diso...
Few studies have examined the relative impact of co-occurring child characteristics on problematic f...
The feeding of young children is fundamentally a relational and multisystemic process. Successful tr...
DIAGNOSTIC SUBTYPES OF FEEDING DISORDERS IN INFANCY: AN EMPIRICAL CONTRIBUTION ON MOTHER-CHILD FEEDI...
OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to examine the differences among three subtypes of feeding dis...
OBJECTIVE: Children with feeding problems often have multiple co-occurring medical and developmental...
The literature on food intake disorder (ARFID) in early childhood has evidenced psychopathologic di...
This study examined the relationship between parent's feeding practices and the feeding behavio...
Objective: The aim of this study was to examine the differences among three subtypes of feeding diso...
Objectives:The primary aim of this study was to describe and compare the clinical characteristics of...
Researches in the field of Developmental Psychopathology have underlined that maternal psychopatholo...
THE POST-TRAUMATIC FEEDING DISORDER IN INFANCY: A COMPARISON OF THREE DIFFERENT DEVELOPMENTAL PATH...
Objectives: To evaluate the effects of age and the presence of feeding pathologies on the relational...
Feeding disorders are common in disabled children, and family reactions are critical factors influen...
Objective: To evaluate over time feeding behavior and emotional-behavioral functioning in a sample o...
Objective: The aim of this study was to examine the differences among three subtypes of feeding diso...