You cannot copy content of this website, your IP is being recorded
ARFID Treatment in Pennsylvania

ARFID Treatment in Pennsylvania

ARFID (Avoidant/Restrictive Food Intake Disorder) treatment focuses on helping individuals address the emotional and behavioral aspects of their eating habits. Primary Prevention Center uses a personalized approach to guide patients in overcoming food aversions, ensuring better nutrition and mental well-being. Consult our team today to begin your journey toward recovery with specialized care tailored to your needs. For more information, contact us or request an appointment online. We are conveniently located at 638 Newtown-Yardley Road Suite 2G/H, Newtown, PA 18940.

ARFID Treatment in Pennsylvania
ARFID Treatment in Pennsylvania

Table of Contents:

Avoidant Restrictive Food Intake Disorder (ARFID) Help for Children & Teens
What Is ARFID?
How Common Is ARFID?
ARFID vs. Picky Eating
Why Pressure Makes ARFID Worse
Evidence-Based ARFID Treatment Approach
Signs Your Child May Need ARFID Treatment
Schedule an ARFID Evaluation Today

Avoidant Restrictive Food Intake Disorder (ARFID) Help for Children & Teens


If your child eats only a small number of “safe foods,” gags at new textures, or experiences panic around meals, they may be struggling with Avoidant/Restrictive Food Intake Disorder (ARFID).

ARFID is not stubbornness. It is not bad parenting. It is not manipulation. It is a nervous system–based eating disorder recognized in the DSM-5.

At Primary Prevention Center in Pennsylvania, we provide comprehensive ARFID evaluation and treatment to help children and teens feel safe around food again.

What Is ARFID?


Avoidant/Restrictive Food Intake Disorder (ARFID) is a clinical eating disorder characterized by extreme food avoidance due to sensory sensitivity (texture, smell, color), fear of choking or vomiting, lack of interest in eating, or anxiety-based food restriction.

Children with ARFID often experience their body reacting before their brain can reason. When introduced to new foods, they may experience gagging, panic, shutdown, crying, or intense refusal. This is a biological stress response — not defiance.

How Common Is ARFID?


Research suggests ARFID affects approximately 1–5% of children, typically beginning in early childhood. Many children with ARFID eat fewer than 20 safe foods and may avoid entire food groups.

Without treatment, ARFID can lead to weight loss or poor growth, nutrient deficiencies, increased anxiety, social withdrawal, and family stress at mealtimes.

ARFID vs. Picky Eating


Typical picky eaters eat from most food groups and slowly expand their diet over time.

Children with ARFID have intense fear or distress around new foods, may gag or shut down, avoid entire categories of food, and experience anxiety before and during meals.

ARFID is a medical and psychological condition — not a phase.

Why Pressure Makes ARFID Worse


Forcing, bribing, or shaming a child to eat activates the stress response. When the amygdala (the brain’s fear center) turns on, appetite turns off.

Pressure increases food anxiety. Safety increases tolerance.

Evidence-Based ARFID Treatment Approach


Our ARFID treatment plan includes:

• Comprehensive evaluation of medical, nutritional, sensory, and anxiety contributors
• Gradual exposure therapy with small, structured steps
• Nervous system regulation strategies
• Parent coaching for supportive mealtime strategies
• Nutritional monitoring for adequate growth and stability

Regulation comes before expansion.

Signs Your Child May Need ARFID Treatment


Consider an evaluation if your child:

• Eats fewer than 20–30 foods
• Avoids entire food groups
• Gags at certain textures
• Has intense fear of choking or vomiting
• Experiences panic or meltdowns at meals
• Shows poor weight gain
• Avoids social situations involving food

Schedule an ARFID Evaluation Today


Early intervention leads to better outcomes.

If your child is struggling with extreme picky eating, food anxiety, or ARFID symptoms, schedule a consultation today at Primary Prevention Center in Pennsylvania.

Contact our office or schedule online to begin building safety around food for your child. We are conveniently located at 638 Newtown-Yardley Road Suite 2G/H, Newtown, PA 18940. We serve patients from Newtown PA, Richboro PA, Newtown Grant PA, Churchville PA, Woodbourne PA, Yardley PA, Bucks County PA, and surrounding areas.

Check Out Our 5 Star Reviews

Check Out Our 5 Start Reviews at Primary Prevention Center in Newtown, PA

Get Directions to Primary Prevention Center, Wellness Clinic in Newtown, PA

Newtown, PA

  • 638 Newtown Yardley Rd Suite 2G/H, Newtown, PA 18940.
  • View Details
 

638 Newtown Yardley Rd Suite 2G/H, Newtown, PA 18940.