Feeding & Eating Difficulties
What an AbilityScore of 0–100 means for feeding difficulties
An AbilityScore of 0–100 for Feeding & Eating Difficulties is a clinician's structured snapshot of your child's feeding-related skills — oral-motor, sensory, regulation and acceptance — right now. A higher number means more skills are in place; a lower one simply means more support helps. It is a baseline to track progress against, never a label, and is formed only at a Pinnacle centre.
If you've heard the words "AbilityScore 0–100" and felt unsure what they mean for your child's eating, here's the gentle, honest picture.
In short
For a child with [Feeding & Eating Difficulties](/), an AbilityScore on a 0–100 scale is simply a clinician's structured way of describing where your child is right now across the skills that feeding draws on — oral-motor strength, sensory comfort with textures, mealtime calm, and willingness to try. A higher number means more of those skills are already in place; a lower number means more support is helpful. It is not a grade, a verdict or a label — it is a starting photograph, taken so progress can be seen clearly over time.What the score actually describes
Feeding is one of the most complex things a small body does — it weaves together muscles, senses, breathing, emotion and trust, all at once. So the AbilityScore looks at the whole picture, not a single moment at the table:- Oral-motor skills — how your child manages chewing, moving food, and swallowing safely
- Sensory comfort — how textures, smells, temperatures and new foods are tolerated
- Mealtime regulation — calm versus distress, and how transitions to eating go
- Range and acceptance — variety of foods and willingness to explore
The single number is the easy-to-hold summary; the real value sits in the detailed profile underneath it, which shows exactly which areas to support first. Think of it as a map, not a measuring stick.
How to read your child's number kindly
The most important comparison is never your child against other children — it is your child against their own earlier baseline. A re-measurement a few months later, against that same starting point, is how you and your clinician will see progress that might be too gradual to notice at the table day to day. A lower starting score is not bad news; it simply means there is a clear, supported road ahead.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 form or a number alone. Our feeding and oral-motor therapy team uses the AbilityScore® baseline to build a plan that fits your child, then re-measures against that same baseline so progress is shown, not guessed. Across 70+ centres and 25 million+ therapy sessions, the goal is always the same: happier, safer, more confident mealtimes.Trusted sources
WHO ICD-11 framework for feeding and eating difficulties; American Academy of Pediatrics guidance on early feeding and growth; ASHA resources on paediatric feeding and swallowing; Pinnacle Blooms Network clinical studies.Next step — Turn the number into a plan. Book a feeding assessment with a Pinnacle clinician and get a clear, kind picture of where your child is and where to begin.
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 a prompt review if your child coughs, gags or chokes during feeds, refuses whole food groups so weight or growth is affected, takes very long over every meal, or shows real distress at the table. These point to feeding safety and need clinician attention sooner.
Try this at home
Keep mealtimes pressure-free: offer a tiny taste of a new food beside a familiar safe one, with no insistence on eating it. Let your child touch, smell or lick it — exploring a food is real progress, even before a single bite.
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 low AbilityScore for feeding bad news?
No. A lower score simply shows there is more room to support, with a clearer road ahead. The number is a starting photograph, not a judgement — and progress is measured against your child's own baseline, never against other children.
Can an AbilityScore diagnose my child's feeding difficulty?
No. The AbilityScore® is a clinician-administered structured assessment that describes your child's current skills. Any diagnosis is formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, by a qualified clinician, considering the whole picture — never from a number alone.
How often is the AbilityScore re-measured?
Your clinician will re-measure against the same starting baseline at planned intervals, so gradual progress that is hard to notice at the table becomes clearly visible over time.