학술논문

Teaching Children to Identify and Avoid Food Allergens Using Behavioral Skills Training
Document Type
Journal Articles
Reports - Evaluative
Author
Quiroz, Matthew J.Schnell-Peskin, Lauren K. (ORCID 0000-0002-9328-0659); Kisamore, April N.Watkins, Jessica DayVladescu, Jason C. (ORCID 0000-0003-4391-9511)
Source
Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis. Sum 2023 56(3):565-574.
Subject
Allergy
Food
Identification
Behavior Standards
Skill Development
Training
Chronic Illness
Elementary School Students
Teaching Methods
Child Safety
Health Promotion
Decision Making
Instructional Effectiveness
Language
English
ISSN
0021-8855
1938-3703
Abstract
Allergic reactions to allergenic foods can pose a lethal threat to children with food allergies. Previous research has demonstrated the effectiveness of using behavioral skills training (BST) plus in situ training (IST) to teach safety responses to children. However, there has not been an evaluation of using BST to teach food safety to children with food allergies. Three elementary-school children of neurotypical development with food allergies participated. We evaluated the efficacy of BST with IST in teaching participants to identify and respond to allergenic foods by (a) asking to see the food packaging, (b) scanning the food label for the allergenic food, and (c) reporting the safety threat to an adult while not consuming the food. Trials without allergenic foods were also presented to ensure discriminated responding. All participants demonstrated the three correct safety responses after BST and responded differentially across allergenic and nonallergenic foods, with two participants requiring feedback (IST).