Occupational Therapy News OTnews January 2019 | Page 27
CHILDREN’S SERVICES FEATURE
The benefits have also been cost effective for parents. The
children are provided with a free lunch at school, and there is
always a variety of different foods available, which the children in
question were not often accessing, so parents were providing lunch
for them.
Importantly, the group has had a positive impact on allowing
and supporting the children to try to engage in lunchtime as an
occupation with their peers to accommodate further opportunity to
enhance social participation.
We hope that as we continue, this will help to reduce food waste
at lunchtime, if all children are accessing the lunch provided.
On a universal level, making the catering menus accessible to
the pupils appeared to reduce anxiety and support all pupils to
access lunchtime.
On an individual level, all pupils who were participating in the
group were able to set themselves achievable goals with the
therapists and this appeared to generally reduce anxieties when
they were aware of what the options for lunch would be. we received included: ‘He doesn’t seem to be so worried about
foods touching, which he did before’; and ‘He was so enthusiastic
about the group and was disappointed when it was over.’
The group was also recognised by Ofsted in its residential
provision inspection, where it said: ‘Young people are supported to
understand how to lead healthy lifestyles’; and ‘Some young people
are engaged in “Food Explorers” to try new types and textures of
foods to help expand their diet’ (Ofsted 2018).
An example of one goal set by a student was to put a small
amount of plain pasta onto his plate at lunchtime. He set this goal
because he was attending a residential trip in the summer and
pasta was a common option for most meals.
He achieved this by the end of the group; he was able to tolerate
this on his plate and try it. in school.
Whats next?
We ran this group as a pilot study, and as a result of the positive
outcomes we are now able to incorporate the group into the
children’s timetabled occupational therapy time, to provide
an integrated approach instead of taking the boys from their
lessons,which was necessary for the trial.
We are planning to provide this group each term with a different
year group, in the hope that the group will continue to have a
positive impact on pupil’s engagement in meal times at home and
References
Farrow C and Coulthard H (2012). Relationships between sensory sensitivity,
anxiety and selective eating in children. Appetite, 58(3): 842-846
Health and Care Professions Council (2016) Standards of conduct,
performance and ethics. Available at: www.hcpc-uk.org/assets/docume
Benefits for occupational therapists
Providing this service for us as occupational therapists, has further
developed our awareness of the importance of food and meal times
as an occupation.
Through this group we have conducted activity analysis and
reviewed the individual components of this activity, for example,
laying the table, practising cutlery skills when preparing food,
organisational tasks and pouring water.
We have also developed our own leadership skills through
organising and planning the group, for example conducting risk
assessments, communicating with parents and teachers, time
management and advocating for this as a priority area within
therapy to continue to promote health and wellbeing.
Positive feedback from participants and their families
nts/10004EDFStandardsofconduct,performanceandethics.pdf
[accessed: 27 June 2018]
Herndon A, DiGuiseppi C, Johnson S, Leiferman J and Reynolds A (2009)
Does nutritional intake differ between children with Autism Spectrum
Disorders and children with typical development? Journal of Autism and
Developmental Disorders, 39(2): 212-222
Marshall J, Hill R, Ziviani J and Dodrill P (2014). Features of feeding difficulty
in children with Autism Spectrum Disorder. International Journal of
Speech-Language Pathology, 16(2): 151-158
Ofsted (2018) More House School; Residential provision inspected under
the social care common inspection framework. Available at: https://files.
api.beta.ofsted.gov.uk/SC013927__13.PDF [accessed: 27 June 2018]
Laura Hawkins and Sarah Motto, occupational therapists, More
House School, Farnham, email: [email protected]
or [email protected]
Overall, the group allowed the boys to explore and taste new foods,
and as a result of this they all appeared to be much more confident
in the presence of foods that were unfamiliar to them. One of the
children in the group said:
‘The group helped me to try
trying foods’.
We sent out a
questionnaire out before
and after the group, to
measure the changes
in attitudes and the
effectiveness of the group,
© GettyImages/zeljkosantrac
and some of the feedback
‘‘
...the group has had
a positive impact on
allowing and supporting
the children to try and
engage in lunchtime as
an occupation...
OTnews January 2019 27