Los Feeding Clinic UK - Specializing in the Treatment of Pediatric Feeding Disorders


Home
| UK Families | About Us | Our Program | Facilities | Success Stories

Testimonials | Medical Implications | Research | Internship Program

Contact Us | Links | Hospital and Clinic Consulting

 


 

 

 

 

Testimonials:

What our clients are saying about the Los Altos feeding Clinic.

Uma - mother of 5 year old twins
My daughter Nitya went from eating nothing by mouth to completely getting all her nutritional needs met by oral feeding in just 10 weeks. My name is Uma and I am mother of 5 year old twins (two of surviving 25 week preemie triplets). My daughter Nitya came home from the NICU at 5 months with a G-tube. Following that, at 8 months she was on tracheotomy for the next 3 years. During this time she was not eating by mouth at all and was followed by OTs for oral-motor sensory issues. Since her decannulation in Dec 2004, we tried several approaches: home cooked blenderized food through G-tube, getting her to be hungry, sensory approaches, etc. all supervised under an OT - but these did not get her to eat by mouth. In March 2006, my occupational therapist suggested that I contact Benjamin Zimmerman at Los Altos Feeding clinic… Now I am feeding her at home and this has been such an amazing experience for us to see her accept food by mouth.

Also in the last 5 years we could not get Nitya's teeth cleaned. Her dentist suggested that she may need general anesthesia for a complete cleaning. Well, now since we started the behavioral therapy she is allowing me to brush her teeth. She has also randomly spoken 20 words and is imitating babbling now. Nitya has made tremendous progress in the last few months.

Audrey – mother of Vivian (18 months old)
Vivian was a 35 week preemie born at 4 pounds 5 ounces and 15 1/2 inches long. At birth her right lung collapsed. She remained in the NICU for over a month. During her stay she had her first genetic test which came back negative for major syndromes, such as Down Syndrome. Vivian has been tested for over 100 genetic syndromes, all negative. She was unable to eat much due to her vaulted palate, bifid uvula, and a submucous cleft. Vivian had every test (swallow study, upper GI, etc.), every evaluation (speech, ENT, GI, etc.), and also seen a ton of specialists all over the country. No one was able to do much about her eating. She had been able to suck from a bottle for a few months and eat about 1/8 a jar of baby food.

When Vivian started eating less and less, we turned to the Los Altos Feeding Clinic in July of 2006 after finding them on the internet. Vivian was at the Los Altos Feeding Clinic for a total of 5 weeks. During that time various techniques were customized by Ben Zimmerman to help Vivian to eat. By the end of the 5 weeks I was doing all food preparation, calculations, and feeding. Vivian went from taking 690 ccs of Pediasure to eating up to 1680 calories by mouth!

Linda - mother of 26 week twin preemies with cystic fibrosis
My 6 year-old twins were born at 26 weeks gestation and were on ventilators for the first 3 months of their lives before they were finally diagnosed with cystic fibrosis, a genetic illness which affects the lungs, pancreas and other mucous producing organs.The long intubation led to severe oral aversion, and the increased acid production,common in children with cf, led to reflux and emesis, contributing further to their aversion.

After many years of feeding therapy that resulted in little progress, we learned of Ben Zimmerman's clinic through their Gastroenterologist's office and also through a client whose older son attended the same kindergarten as my son. I was excited by the progress of her toddler, and called the Los Altos Feeding Clinic for an appointment for my twins in May of 2006. 5 months later, they are no longer tube dependant, they are drinking the special high-calorie formula they have been getting through the tube since birth, and they are eating calorie enriched baby food for the first time in their lives. What is especially remarkable is that all of this was done without having to resort to the technique of introducing hunger to them - which is something we couldn't do because maintaining a high calorie diet is essential to the health and well-being of children with cystic fibrosis. For the first time, we are looking forward to a future in which my children can enjoy food and all the social milestones where food plays such an important role.

Thank you Los Altos Feeding Clinic and Mr. Zimmerman!

Helen --- Mother of Rebecca
Rebecca is 2 years old, she has a rare metabolic disorder (UMPS), which means that she can’t produce enough energy to grow & develop. She has been diagnosed with failure to thrive and developmental delay.

She was born at 2.5 kg (5.5 lbs) and from the start had difficulty feeding, she had recurrent thrush in her mouth and would not suck. She was weaned at 4 months and seemed to enjoy solid foods more than milk but she still did not gain sufficient weight. At 4 months we were told there was something wrong and investigations started. At 6 months Rebecca was placed on an NG tube as her weight was so low. She remained on the NG tube for 7 months, at this stage her doctors wanted to give her a G-tube. Rather that let her go through this we managed to wean her onto drinking from a cup and managed to get her to drink sufficient high formula milk to enable us to get rid of the tube altogether.

Rebecca was finally diagnosed when she was 16 months old and was placed on medication. At this stage we felt it was time to try and resolve her feeding difficulties as she could now get the necessary calories and energy from her food. All the interventions that had given her nutrition had resulted in a complete phobia for eating. She would not open her mouth for food, if we managed to get any food in her mouth she gagged or vomited. To get her to drink sufficient high calorie milk we had to bribe her 8 –10 time a day with books and music. Her weight gain was very poor and we were again being threatened with the g-tube.

We are based in Ireland and had tried all the usual food desensitisation programs. We searched the web but could find nothing in Ireland or Europe, which would actually make Rebecca eat without giving us advice or starving her. Eventually we came across the Los Altos Feeding Clinic web Site and it seemed to offer what we were looking for. We spoke with Ben Zimmerman and with other parents who had been through Ben’s treatment and we were convinced. We took the 11hr flight to San Francisco and did not look back.

Ben worked one-on-one with Rebecca and had her eating solid foods within 2 days. He modified existing protocols and developed new techniques to deal with Rebecca’s food refusals. After a month Rebecca was taking 1200 –1500 calories orally she had gained 1lb and was being fed 3 times daily. Each session taking just 30 minutes.

In the month since we came home Rebecca has gained 4lbs. She has so much more energy and stamina – we never expected that food would make as big a difference as it has – but every week she seems to hit some minor development milestone. We know that we would never have got her to this level of eating without the Los Altos Feeding Clinic and even better Ben continues to stay in touch and help us fully refine her feeding process.

I have no hesitation in recommending Ben Zimmerman and the Los Altos Feeding Clinic. It works. Thank You!

Jennifer ---- mother of Max who is 3 years old
Hi Moms,
I recently began taking Maxwell, my 3 year old, to a feeding clinic in Los Altos for severe food refusal. Those of you who know me well, know that he has lived off of milk, yogurt, cheese, and crackers for the past two years (I am not exaggerating -- he has never eaten pizza, fruit, macaroni, juice, etc).

I have taken him to see several different paedatricians, a nutritionist, an occupational therapist, and a child psychiatrist, but until recently was unsuccessful in finding someone who could help him. I had tried everything, except putting him in an inpatient behavioral unit (i.e. a hospital setting). I recently discovered the Los Altos Feeding Clinic and started taking him there.

Before going, he refused to try anything (he said he was scared of the food and so on). He has some texture and sensory issues, which is what initially started his food refusal. Ben Zimmerman started working with him, and after only a month, he is eating food at home (all pureed at this point). We will be gradually increasing the texture, until he is eating "real" food. My husband and I are thrilled with the results so far and wanted to share this information, in case you or someone you know is in a similar situation.

Trisha ----Mother to Mackenzie (16 months old)
Hey there Moms!
My name is Trisha. My son Mackenzie is 16 months old. He was born full term and weighed 8Lbs 12oz, however he was born with congenital heart disease. At 2 days old he had his first open heart surgery to repair his Aortic valve.

At 7 weeks old he was still in the hospital and had not gained any weight. He refused to drink by mouth. Knowing he needed an other heart surgery, we knew he needed to grow; therefore the next step was a G-Tube.

At 8 weeks old the g-tube was in place and Mack shut down. He refused everything in his mouth; he would gag, wretch, vomit and could only handle about 60 ccs/hour on a continuous pump for 18 hours a day. Life was tough for him and our family. We made it to 6 months for his second heart surgery; a VSD repair and de-banding of his PA valve. Mack came through the surgery ready for life. He had much more energy.

We thought it was time to feed by mouth again. OT, GI's and PT were absolutely no help what so ever. They'd say stop feeding him by mouth the second he gags; I would put a spoon to his mouth and he's gag so the feeding would stop. Their theory didn't work.

After a 3 month wait we were accepted to St Joseph 's in NJ for an intensive feeding program. The first day there Mack ate 4 oz of peaches, so the doctors and behavioral specialists told us to go home and we would have more "FUN" feeding Mack at home. By this time Mack was 1 year old. The next 3 months at home were no "FUN" at all.

Mack shut down, it would take over and hour to feed him 4oz of baby food and he wouldn't drink anything; so back to using the g-tube forever at this point. Until I found Ben Zimmerman at the Los Altos Feeding Clinic. Thank God! Ben took Mack on within weeks of my first phone call to him. Within the first week at the clinic Mack was no longer using his g-tube for nutrients. After 2 weeks of Ben feeding Mack I got to try. Incredible! Less than 30 minutes to feed Mack 8oz of food and 6oz of milk. Real milk, no more formulas!!

We spent 4 full weeks at the clinic and then went home. Everyday gets better, and faster to feed Mack. Ben Zimmerman is a miracle worker; I had lost a hope of Mack ever eating like a normal child, and Ben gave me back hope, and a life. What he gave Mackenzie is much more. Mack is talking, eating and walking. He is thriving in a matter of a few short weeks. All I can say is trust Ben, he knows!! And trust in yourself and your child that you can get through the feeding by mouth; everyday is a huge improvement. Mack has a chance now at a normal, healthy life because he is eating by mouth. He is much happier, he's personality has changed for the better, even his color has changed from eating real food!!



Eileen--- Mother to Daniel (14 months)
We have used the Los Altos Feeding Clinic (LAFC) and would love to share our experience with it. First a lot of background on our situation. Our child, Daniel, has oral aversion. In other words, he does not tolerate things in his mouth, be it toys or food. This child will literally starve himself to death given the chance.

At two months old, I found that he would react to nursing as if he had reflux. Feed for a few sucks then yank himself away, arching his whole body away from me, crying, kicking and pushing. Nursing was brutal. We figured out that he fed better when he was too sleepy to fight us. So we would schedule his feedings with his nap time – rock him asleep, and start nursing. At four months old I was excited to start him on solids thinking things would be different. We persevered with solid foods for a good four months until he was 8 months old with no progress at all. Then one morning he was intently watching me eat a piece of toast, he seemed quite interested. So I offered it to him. Daniel licked the toast and a TINY speck (size of a pinhead) of a crumb was on his tongue and he started retching. Immediately I swept it out with my finger and called the paedatrician. He said that that was definitely NOT normal and told me to hold off giving him real solid food for now.

I continued trying the jars. If he was given the fruit jars, he was retch the first few bites, and end us taking most of the stage 2 jars vomiting approximately every other day on them. If he was given a vegetable (peas, carrots, sweet potatoes) or protein jar (beef and vegetable, chicken noodle), he would retch, gag, and vomit at the first bite and empty out the entire contents of his stomach. Given how difficult it was to get the food into him, we simply didn’t bother giving him vegetable or protein jars anymore. He readily took the Yobaby jars at first, then he started retching also, vomiting approximately every other day on those too.

He required A LOT of toys and distractions, feeding at the park, in front of the television, or in the bathtub to take jars or yobaby. He required to be rocked asleep for his milk feedings. Things were quite difficult with a lot of cleaning up of his vomit.

The paedatrician referred us to O.T. specializing in oral issues. We were then referred to GI after about 4-5 sessions with minimal progress. The GI said it was classic oral aversion and there was nothing they would do for us. Daniel even went in for an upper GI study and swallow study. Results came back normal except for the fact that he vomited during the study. She recommended the Kennedy Kreiger Institute (KKI) (sp?) in Baltimore Maryland where they have a behavioral feeding clinic. She said that they have success with kids that they can’t help. We were also seen by the Stanford Infant Behavioral and Development Clinic across the street from Lucille Packard Children’s hospital.

Everyone said that Daniel had severe oral/feeding aversion but they all threw their hands up and said they couldn't’t help and did’t know what to do. Then I read a glowing review about the LAFC from a mom who had a picky eater. If I recall correctly, this boy only ate dairy items and breads. He had never eaten a sandwich or fries or any “normal” food that a 3 year old eats.

We went in for an initial evaluation. Ben Zimmerman, the guy who runs the place, observed me feeding Daniel a jar. Then took over the feeding for the last a few bites. When he was done, Ben said that Daniel was “a simple case.” I was shocked because all the medical establishment people had no idea what to do with Daniel. Honestly I had my doubts. It seemed like too confident a statement to make. We went in for another seven sessions and Daniel came out like a different child in two and half weeks. He now takes the protein and vegetable jars, without vomiting. There usually is a retch for the first one or two bites, but these days, he is vomiting approximately once every week or two. And he doesn’t empty the entire contents of his stomach. Daniel will try to make the effort to keep it down. He also has started to take some normal food like scrambled eggs, pasta, Chinese noodles, hamburger, and fries. And we no longer have to give him his milk asleep – he is drinking it from a special cut-out cup that we feed to him.

Daniel started out in the 10th percentile for weight and was quickly dropping as we started the LAFC. The doctors were talking about the possibility of Daniel getting a GI tube. Now he is a little below the 50th percentile for weight and never required the feeding tube. He still has some areas to work on though, like taking more textured foods and weaning him off the baby jars. Our insurance did not cover it although others do, but it was truly worth the expense. It is some of the best money we have EVER spent.

I also know of another family with 6 yr old cystic fibrosis (CF) twins who are classmates with my older child. They were taking most or all of their food through the tube. One of the twins is ready to come off the tube through the work that Ben has done at the LAFC, and the other who did not eat any food orally before is making significant progress.

Best of luck,
Eileen Shih

Vlada---- Mother to Julia (8 months old)
My baby girl who nursed so well in the first month of her life stopped eating when she was 6 weeks old. She could go without eating for up to 11 hours (which is not OK for a 6 weeks old baby). She would not nurse or take a bottle except when asleep. Even when asleep it was a challenge: it would take her 3 hours to finish a 3oz of milk or formula. By the time she finished it was time to feed her again; we were constantly feeding her.

She was diagnosed with reflux and was prescribed Zantac, which helped very little. She was still eating slowly and showing no interest in food. Because she was refusing to nurse or take a bottle for long hours, we started using a dropper or a spoon to feed her. The spillage was high and she would vomit once in while. We went to see a regular hospital feeding therapist who encourages us to continue distracting her attention by showing her toys or TV. We did not even go for a follow up visit because these methods were not effective. Our daughter’s weight gain slowed and I was extremely scared for our baby’s health and development.

I hoped in vain that she would eat better with solids. It would take us an hour to an hour and a half to feed her one meal. She would hold food in her mouth and swallow only if we gave her a pacifier. She eventually developed a dependency on the pacifier to trigger her swallowing. Toys and TV were effective distractions only in a short term.

Then, a couple of months ago I heard about the Los Altos Feeding clinic and Ben Zimmerman who does miracles with babies and kids: THEY START EATING! Kids who never ate by themselves started eating at his clinic.

I cannot describe how much I appreciate what Ben did for us. It was hard to change our behavior during feedings, to pay attention to our own reactions and responses to the baby. But the results have been overwhelmingly successful and worth all the hard work.

Ben showed us techniques that we had never heard of or been shown before. After only one week of feeding her and learning her habits, Ben was able to teach us how to stop using distractions during her meals. We adopted Ben’s protocol on a gradual basis, and brought our daughter’s caregivers into the process on an equally gradual basis. This has worked very well for both baby and adults, and will continue to bear fruit during the coming months.

We know our daughter will continue to improve if we stick with the program – and this is the best program we have seen! I would unreservedly recommend Ben’s feeding clinic to any parent whose baby has feeding issues.

Kathleen ----mother to Kristen (7 years old)
My daughter Kristen was born in March of 2000 with congenital Hydrocephalus, and as a result of elevated intracranial pressure in utero, she suffered an ischemic episode and developed hemiplegic cerebral palsy, severe visual problems, epilepsy, and developmental delay.

Kristen had her first shunt placed when she was 2 days old. She was sent home at 6 lbs, with a nasogastric feeding tube in place and instructions to feed her through the tube whatever she couldn't finish through the bottle. After her 4th neurosurgery at 7 months old, she was still barely 12 lbs. It was suggested that I stop attempting to breast feed and the NG tube was re-inserted, this time it was in for nine months. Because Kristen could not handle the volume, she developed severe reflux, even though we were extremely careful to run the pump very slowly. We would think she was okay, then before we knew it she would be throwing up across the room, choking, and turning blue. The feeding tube that went in through her nose would come up out of her stomach and out of her mouth, and I would need to leap across the room and pull it out. And if that wasn't awful enough, I would then have to re-insert it. Over and over again.

We were referred to a local feeding therapist when Kristen was almost a year old, whose evaluation stated that her "oral-motor components are intact and adequate for the management of liquids from a bottle and pureed foods from a utensil other than a spoon. At this time Kristen has an oral aversion to the spoon and when it approaches she closes her mouth and turns away. She seems, however, to enjoy the taste and texture of the food that is offered to her either by finger or by dropper."

At this time, I began to feed Kristen with a 1 ml dropper, because of her "oral aversion to the spoon". As you can imagine, it was an extraordinarily time-consuming process. I continued to do so until some other well-meaning therapists said that I shouldn't try to feed her when she didn't want to eat and suggested that we go back to feeding her with a bottle until she "wants to eat". By this time, I had managed to get her into the 5-10th percentile on the growth charts, and her "failure to thrive" diagnosis was considered resolved.

Time passed, Kristen was almost 3 years old, and ready to enter the school system. Her main nourishment was still Pediasure from a bottle. No one knew what to do about her feeding situation. I knew she wasn't getting enough, but I didn't want her to have a feeding tube placed because if an infection were to occur in the G-tube site, it could travel to her other shunt endings and end up infecting them, which could have deadly consequences. We prayed and prayed that every year, she would somehow "start eating". How that was supposed to happen was a mystery to all, as she was still turning away from the spoon. She underwent her 8th neurosurgery for shunt malfunction when she was 3 1/2. She remained on Pediasure in a bottle for the next 3 years, when we re-initiated feeding therapy with the same therapist.

By this time, Kristen had fallen off of the height chart, and was barely on the weight chart. We were given almost the same advice from the feeding therapist as we had the first time. The doctors said her intake needed to be at least 1400 cals per day, but when we began trying to give her that much she fought even more. When the school nurse contacted me and said there was a problem with "restraining" Kristen at school so she would eat, I felt that I had reached the end of my rope. Maybe I would need to pull Kristen out of school so I could feed her at home all day so she would be able to get the appropriate amount of calories the doctors recommended. I wondered if anyone knew what a nightmare we were going through, and how almost the only thing I could think about from the moment I got up in the morning until the time I went to bed at night was the amount of food/Pediasure/calories that Kristen had consumed for the day and if it had "been enough". Of course I knew that most of the time it hadn't, and the anxiety it produced was almost unbearable. There seemed to be no place to turn.

I went online and searched again for help. This time, the Los Altos Feeding Clinic came up, and I read and read all of the success storied and testimonials of children that Ben had helped to eat. It seemed almost too good to be true. I called that afternoon and spoke with Ben, who listened carefully and was optimistic about Kristen's abilities.

We went in for an evaluation a few days later, and showed Ben how Kristen wouldn't eat. He said it was a pretty "straightforward case" and we almost fell over. We made an appointment for the following morning.

The next morning, Ben was able to get 9oz. of thick pureed baby food in Kristen in 15 minutes. We continued for 3 sessions per week for about 2 1/2 to 3 weeks, and then I learned how to feed Kristen. After 7 years, Kristen's caloric intake is now up to over 1400 calories per day of thick pureed food, she is being fed entirely by a spoon and a cup from the front, each meal averages less that 15 minutes, and she is completely off of Pediasure and the bottle. We look forward to continuing to work with Ben to upgrade the texture of Kristen's food and to facilitating her to self feed as well.

To this day, I don't understand why this help was so hard to find. Did I mention that I am an occupational therapist? Did I mention that I have had access to the "best of the best" as far as feeding therapists are concerned, both on the web as well as through the continuing education that I have access to as a healthcare professional? I have read book after book, article after article, on sensory integration theories, occupational therapy intervention, adaptive feeding techniques, gastroesophageal motility issues, etc., etc., etc. In looking back, I realize that these behavioral techniques could have been employed with Kristen following that initial feeding evaluation, when Kristen was less than a year old. Why did it take over 6 more years?

We remain profoundly thankful to Ben Zimmerman and the Los Altos Feeding Clinic for the therapy that we feel "saved our lives". If that sounds somewhat extreme, consider the psychosocial ramifications of being out in public with a 15 year old drinking a bottle. Every piece of literature that I researched stated that feeding problems do not get better, they get worse with time. And the insertion of a feeding tube into Kristen's stomach had the potential of deadly ramifications. But even in my training as an occupational therapist, feeding tubes are seen as "necessary" and "beneficial" when a child refuses to eat. The risks, the strain on the family, and the daily stress of the care of a child with a feeding tube are something no doctor or therapist can begin to explain.

Thanks Ben, more than you will ever know.

Marion--- mother to Luke (4 years old)
I am the mother of a four year old little boy that ate normally solid foods from a spoon up to the time he was fifteen months old, which was exactly the moment his brother was born. Subsequently, he would only take the bottle and refused solid food. The bottles were like a smoothie, filled with protein, carbs, vegetables and fruits. We went to a food clinic within a hospital, went to many different therapists and consultants, to no avail. Prior to starting the program with Ben, my son would drink eight to nine bottles a day and would eat occasionally a yogurt, refusing any other solid food.

The first session with Ben, my son was fed 8 oz. of solid food with the spoon. We saw Ben approximately for 3 1/2 weeks, mostly three times a week. My son is now fed solid food with the spoon and drinks from an open cup. He has three meals a day, no bottles, and is rather happy to sit down and eat.

I am thrilled and overwhelmed with the success of Ben's method. I wish I could tell all the parents out there that have feeding difficulties with their children, do not waste your time and money to go down the road of therapies after therapies. Go to Ben, his method works like a miracle. Some people may think it is hard to go through it, but it really is not. It is in the best interest of your child. Thank you Ben! May many parents benefit from your knowledge.

Marion

 

 
Copyright ©  2007 Los Altos Feeding Clinic. All rights reserved.
< > LorenzoNet </>