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Sensory-Based Feeding Selectivity

AbilityScore 400–500 for feeding selectivity: what next?

A 400–500 AbilityScore for Sensory-Based Feeding Selectivity is a starting baseline, not a verdict. Your next step is to turn it into a personalised, pressure-free feeding plan with a Pinnacle clinician — and to re-measure progress against your child's own starting point. Only a clinician confirms anything.

AbilityScore 400–500 for feeding selectivity: what next?
AbilityScore 400–500 for feeding selectivity — what to do next — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

A score in the 400–500 band isn't a verdict — it's a starting line, and a hopeful one. Here's exactly what to do with it.

In short

An AbilityScore® in the 400–500 band for your child's [Sensory-Based Feeding Selectivity](/) is a structured snapshot of where things stand today — not a label, and not a ceiling. It tells your clinical team where to focus first so that mealtimes become calmer and your child's accepted-food range can grow, step by step. Your next move is simple: turn this baseline into a personalised plan with a Pinnacle clinician, and begin gentle, structured support.

What this band means in real life

Many children with sensory-based feeding difficulties eat a narrow set of "safe" foods, react strongly to certain textures, smells or temperatures, and find new foods genuinely distressing — not naughty, but overwhelming. A 400–500 baseline simply marks the current pattern so progress can be measured against your child's own starting point, never against other children. Real progress looks like small, concrete wins:
  • tolerating a new food near the plate before ever tasting it
  • accepting one new texture or a new colour of a familiar food
  • a mealtime that ends with less distress for everyone
  • a slowly widening list of accepted foods over weeks, not days

Progress here is rarely a straight line — plateaus are normal, not failure. That's exactly why we re-measure rather than guess.

What to do next

1. Convert the score into a plan. Sit with a Pinnacle feeding-focused clinician (often an occupational therapist and speech-language pathologist working together) to translate the baseline into specific, gentle goals. 2. Keep mealtimes pressure-free. Never force, bribe or punish around food — pressure tends to shrink the safe-food list, not grow it. 3. Build food familiarity slowly. Exposure without demand — seeing, touching, smelling a new food — comes long before tasting. 4. Rule out the physical. Persistent gagging, choking, pain, weight-loss or very few accepted foods deserves prompt review by your paediatrician alongside therapy.

The Pinnacle way

A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under the care of a qualified clinician — never from an online figure alone. Your child's plan draws on occupational therapy and feeding-focused speech therapy, and every step is re-measured against your child's own baseline so even quiet progress becomes visible. Across 70+ centres, 700+ therapists and 25 million+ therapy sessions, the aim is the same: calmer mealtimes and a child who eats, and thrives.

Trusted sources

WHO ICD-11 (6B83, feeding and eating disorders); American Academy of Pediatrics guidance on feeding and mealtime behaviour; American Speech-Language-Hearing Association (ASHA) on paediatric feeding; Pinnacle Blooms Network clinical studies.

Next step — Turn this baseline into a plan that fits your child. Book a feeding assessment with a Pinnacle clinician.

This is general information, not a diagnosis — a clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.

What to watch

Seek prompt paediatric review alongside therapy if your child gags or chokes on accepted foods, loses weight, refuses entire food groups, shows pain with eating, or the accepted-food list keeps shrinking rather than growing.

Try this at home

Put one new food on the table near — not on — your child's plate, with zero pressure to eat it. Let them simply see, smell or touch it across several relaxed meals. Familiarity is the first step to a taste; celebrate any curiosity, never the eating itself.

Trusted sources

Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10

This is general information, not a diagnosis. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care.

Frequently asked

Is a 400–500 AbilityScore band a bad result?

No. It is a structured snapshot of where your child stands today, used to guide where support should start. It is not a label or a limit, and progress is always measured against your child's own baseline rather than other children.

Will my child grow their list of accepted foods?

Many children do, with gentle, structured, pressure-free support over weeks and months. Progress often comes in small wins — tolerating a food nearby, then a new texture or colour — rather than sudden change. Your clinical team will set realistic, child-specific goals.

Should I force or bribe my child to try new foods?

No. Pressure, forcing, bribing or punishing around food tends to shrink the safe-food list and raise mealtime anxiety. Familiarity without demand — seeing, touching and smelling new foods — is the safer foundation.

When should I involve our paediatrician?

Promptly, if there is gagging, choking, pain with eating, weight loss, or very few accepted foods. Therapy and medical review work best together to rule out any physical cause.

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