This small experimental pilot study addresses the knowledge gap related to the use of weighted blankets for children with anxiety related to food and eating.
The purpose of the study is to research if weighted blankets might help children with anxiety related to food tolerate new foods better. The parent will be asked to complete a 10-question questionnaire and make a list of the foods the child eats on three occasions (before the study begins, after a control period and after the child uses the weighted blanket). The child will be asked to use a weighted blanket for 5 to 15 minutes prior to at least 3 meals a week for one month, and the child will be asked to complete a 20-question questionnaire taking about 5-12 minutes to complete asking about how they feel on days that they use the weighted blanket and one time a week during the month that they don't use the weighted blanket. The parent will be asked to report any new foods the child tries on the days that they do use the weighted blanket. The parent will be asked to keep the weighted blanket and supervise all use of the weighted blanket for safety. This study will take approximately 2 months total.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
OTHER
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
6
Blanket weighted with 10% or less of body weight applied to child prior to meals for duration no more than 15 minutes
Capital Area Speech & Occupational Therapy
Austin, Texas, United States
Food Neophobia Scale for Children Questionnaire
The Food Neophobia Scale for Children is a 10-item Likert scale questionnaire that parents complete. The responses to the questions on the Food Neophobia Scale for Children ranged from one (Strongly Agree) to seven (Strongly Disagree). The value of each response could be worth 7 points, depending on the responses. The caregivers completed the Food Neophobia Scale for Children questionnaire at baseline, following the usual care period, and after the intervention period. Higher total scores indicate higher levels of food neophobia. The total score range was 10 (lowest) to 70 (highest).
Time frame: Baseline, prior to treatment and post treatment
State-Trait Anxiety Inventory for Children (STAIC) Median T-Score
The STAI-C Anxiety Scale asks for ratings of agreement on a 3-point scale using the stem "I feel…" for 20 items both indicative of the presence of anxiety (e.g., 1= not upset; 2= upset; 3= very upset) and reverse-worded (e.g., 1= very calm; 2= calm; 3= not calm) items. The participants completed the STAIC S-Anxiety scale three times per week during the usual care and treatment period. Higher T-scores indicate higher anxiety. The mean of the normalized T-score was 50, and the standard deviation was 10. No established clinical thresholds are defined for this measure.
Time frame: Prior and post treatment, up to 2 months
Average Number of New Foods
The average number of foods tried during the control period will be compared to baseline and the average number of new foods tried during the control period will be compared to the average number of new foods tried in the treatment period to understand if more foods were tried when using the weighted blanket.
Time frame: Control Period (1 month) and Treatment Period (1 month)
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