The role of re‐presentation in the treatment of liquid expulsion
Emma M. Auten, Kathryn M. Peterson

TL;DR
This study examines how re-presentation affects liquid expulsion in children with feeding difficulties, finding it beneficial for some.
Contribution
The study evaluates the necessity of re-presentation in escape extinction treatments for liquid expulsion in children.
Findings
Re-presentation led to increased swallowing and reduced expulsion in 10 out of 17 children.
Various response patterns were observed across participants.
The study suggests re-presentation may be an effective treatment component.
Abstract
Children with feeding difficulties often engage in expulsion (i.e., spitting out) of liquid. Expulsion is problematic because it limits the volume of liquid that a child will consume. Researchers have used re‐presentation as an embedded component of escape extinction to treat expel. Although studies have demonstrated that re‐presentation can effectively reduce expel, it is unclear whether it should always be included with escape‐extinction‐based treatments. We describe a program evaluation project designed to examine the effects of re‐presentation on liquid expulsion for children with severe feeding difficulties. We conducted a prospective consecutive controlled case series to compare the effects of a function‐based treatment with and without re‐presentation and reported on the outcomes obtained for 17 children. Various patterns of responding emerged across participants. However,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsChild Nutrition and Feeding Issues · Infant Development and Preterm Care · Dysphagia Assessment and Management
