Our services

ARFID & selective eating

Specialized support for children and adults with highly restricted or selective eating patterns that affect their health and daily life.

Telehealth across New York, Connecticut, and Florida.

What is ARFID?

ARFID (Avoidant/Restrictive Food Intake Disorder) is an eating disorder that involves significant restriction of what or how much a person eats. It is often driven by sensory sensitivity, fear of aversive consequences (e.g., choking, vomiting), low interest in eating, or some combination. It is a chronic condition that often co-occurs with anxiety, autism, ADHD, and OCD, and requires specialized treatment.

Specialized training

I have formal training in the three protocols with the strongest current evidence base for ARFID:

  • CBT-AR (Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for ARFID), developed at Massachusetts General Hospital - the most established structured treatment for ARFID across age groups.
  • SPACE-ARFID (Supportive Parenting for Anxious Childhood Emotions, adapted for ARFID), developed at Yale - a parent-based approach for children where direct work is not the right fit.
  • FBT-ARFID (Family-Based Treatment for ARFID), adapted from the gold-standard FBT protocol - a parent-empowered model with multidisciplinary coordination.

Clinical approach

Because ARFID varies widely from person to person, treatment is tailored to meet individual needs. Treatment begins with a comprehensive assessment including history, current maintaining factors, prior interventions, co-occurring conditions, and the specific drivers of restriction. From there, treatment may include all or some of the following:

  • Structured exposure-based work with the individual using CBT-AR
  • Parent-based intervention using SPACE-ARFID when direct work with the child is not indicated or has not been productive
  • Family-based treatment (FBT-ARFID) with active parent involvement at meals
  • Integrated approaches drawing on anxiety treatment

Where appropriate, I coordinate with pediatricians, psychiatrists, occupational therapists, and registered dietitians.

Who I see

  • Children and adolescents with ARFID
  • Adults with ARFID
  • Families managing selective eating that does not meet full ARFID criteria but is significantly impairing
  • Clients who are medically stable

I do not treat clients who are underweight, losing weight, or otherwise medically unstable. Those presentations may need a higher level of care, and I'm glad to provide referrals.

Because ARFID often co-occurs with anxiety and OCD, treatment may also draw on approaches I use for those conditions — see child & teen anxiety or adult anxiety for more.

Ready to take the next step?

Schedule a free 20-minute call and let's talk about what's going on.

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