Picky Eaters
CE Information
Select Format
Select Length
Highlights
  • Ideas and recipes to share with your patients on how to get kids to eat their nutrients
  • Educate families and caretakers on how to properly introduce foods to allow for nutrient development of taste buds
  • Enhance outcomes in rehabilitation therapy with this holistic approach to service delivery
More Course Details

Summit Subscriber? Log in to add this course.

Additional Information

As many parents already know, it is sometimes challenging just to get a toddler to eat, never mind eating healthy! This course will assist the rehab professional in being able to share recipes and ideas on how to get picky eaters eating healthy. The course will also address taste bud development and how to improve and change growing tastebuds from bad eating habits into healthy eating habits. Finally, the course will adapt common recipes to allow for improved nutrient content without sacrificing taste.

The content of this program is germane to children, students and clients ages 0-3.

Target Audience: Physical Therapists, Physical Therapist Assistants, Occupational Therapists, Occupational Therapy Assistants, Speech-Language Pathologists

Highlights

  • Ideas and recipes to share with your patients on how to get kids to eat their nutrients
  • Educate families and caretakers on how to properly introduce foods to allow for nutrient development of taste buds
  • Enhance outcomes in rehabilitation therapy with this holistic approach to service delivery
Formats icon

Other therapists also liked...

Reviews

5/5

Virginia (TX) on Apr 28, 2026

finding the resource section was confusing. had to ask in chat. i wanted it before i clicked view as i have a hearing loss with some frequencies. (hers was fine, but i never know until i hear a new prof.) the running commentary at the bottom was different that what the prof was saying. i think it was the ongoing chat. at first i thought it was the closed caption. to me that should be a button you push if you want it, or at least have a button where i can turn it off. too much. i would have liked to have heard more about eat disorders with asd ( all my clients) and more about older children who already have established negative patterns...... texture issues\/ solutions

4/5

Claribel (NY) on Apr 13, 2026

all was well presented and informative.

5/5

Anna (OH) on Mar 30, 2026

it was a great refresher. i do a lot of feeding therapy and i got a few new ideas.

5/5

Brenda (GA) on Mar 29, 2026

i loved the course and the presenter's addition of experience with her own kids and real life situation examples.

5/5

Abbi (CO) on Mar 26, 2026

presentation of food

4/5

Deborah (NE) on Mar 19, 2026

loved the information on when to introduce foods and alternatives to whole milk

5/5

Armanda (NJ) on Mar 17, 2026

very interesting course

2/5

Jenine (AZ) on Mar 16, 2026

closed caption and the audio did not match.

4/5

Sarah (MT) on Mar 04, 2026

information on taste development was helpful, and good insight for breastfed vs. formula fed babies. one area i thought could be adjusted was the offering of a "no-thank-you bite," which can still be a higher-pressure and less neuro-diversity affirming strategy.

4/5

Riddhi (IN) on Feb 11, 2026

more external resources on how to work with a child under 1 and 2 year old


Unlock Unlimited CE Courses with Summit Subscription

Pick Your Plan & Sign Up Today!