Preparation for Child Psych PRITE and Boards
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(Introduction)
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'''Infantile Anorexia''' is characterized by the child’s refusal to eat adequate amounts of food for at least 1 month. The infant/toddler with IA rarely communicates hunger, lacks interest in food and eating, and shows growth deficiency. The child’s food refusal does not follow a traumatic event and is not due to an underlying medical illness. The onset of the food refusal often occurs during the transition to spoon- and self-feeding, typically between 6 months and 3 years of age.
 
'''Infantile Anorexia''' is characterized by the child’s refusal to eat adequate amounts of food for at least 1 month. The infant/toddler with IA rarely communicates hunger, lacks interest in food and eating, and shows growth deficiency. The child’s food refusal does not follow a traumatic event and is not due to an underlying medical illness. The onset of the food refusal often occurs during the transition to spoon- and self-feeding, typically between 6 months and 3 years of age.
  
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[[Category:Disorders]]
 
[[Category:Disorders]]

Revision as of 20:31, 29 November 2011

Introduction

Infantile Anorexia (IA) is a diagnosis not found in DSM-IV, but rather in the Diagnostic Classification of Mental Health and Development Disorders of Infancy and Early Childhood (DC:03-R). DC:03-R is designed for diagnosing difficulties in very young children published by a non-profit Zero to Three.

Infantile Anorexia is characterized by the child’s refusal to eat adequate amounts of food for at least 1 month. The infant/toddler with IA rarely communicates hunger, lacks interest in food and eating, and shows growth deficiency. The child’s food refusal does not follow a traumatic event and is not due to an underlying medical illness. The onset of the food refusal often occurs during the transition to spoon- and self-feeding, typically between 6 months and 3 years of age.