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Sensory-Based Feeding Selectivity

AbilityScore® 300–400 in Sensory-Based Feeding Selectivity

An AbilityScore of 300–400 is a clinician-measured starting baseline for a child with Sensory-Based Feeding Selectivity — showing real strengths to build on alongside areas needing structured feeding support. It is a starting line, not a label, and children move with the right help. Only a Pinnacle clinician can confirm it.

AbilityScore® 300–400 in Sensory-Based Feeding Selectivity
AbilityScore® 300–400 & Feeding Selectivity — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

If your child eats only a handful of foods and mealtimes feel like a battle, an AbilityScore band can turn that worry into a clear, hopeful starting point.

In short

An AbilityScore® of 300–400 is one of several bands a clinician uses to describe where your child is starting from with Sensory-Based Feeding Selectivity — not a verdict and not a ceiling. Broadly, a band in this range suggests your child has real, workable strengths to build on alongside areas where mealtimes and food acceptance need focused, structured support. It is a baseline — a starting line, not a finish line — and children move within and across bands with the right help.

What an AbilityScore band actually tells you

Think of the band as a shared snapshot, taken by a clinician, of how your child currently manages eating across the things that matter — accepting new textures and tastes, sitting through a meal, tolerating the look and smell of food, and the family stress around feeding. A 300–400 band typically means:
  • There are genuine anchors to build on — foods, settings or routines your child already accepts.
  • Specific sensory and behavioural patterns are making mealtimes harder, and these respond well to structured therapy.
  • Progress is best tracked against your child's own earlier score, not against other children.

The band's real value is comparison over time. When your child is re-measured, even quiet gains — one new texture, a calmer mealtime, less mealtime distress — become visible and measurable.

Why feeding selectivity responds so well to support

Sensory-Based Feeding Selectivity (ICD-11 6B83) is not fussiness and not a parenting failure. For many children it reflects how their sensory system processes texture, smell and the unfamiliar. Graded, playful, low-pressure exposure — guided by an occupational therapist or feeding specialist — gently widens what feels safe to eat. Early, structured help reduces nutritional worry and brings calm back to the family table.

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 single number. Our clinician-administered, structured assessment gives you your child's true baseline, then a plan built around their strengths. Drawing on 25 million+ therapy sessions and 4.95 lakh+ families served across 70+ centres, we measure feeding therapy progress against your child's own AbilityScore® baseline, so you can see help working. [Learn more about how we work](/).

Trusted sources

WHO ICD-11 (feeding and eating disorders, 6B83); American Academy of Pediatrics guidance on feeding and nutrition (healthychildren.org); American Speech-Language-Hearing Association on paediatric feeding.

Next step — Turn a number into a plan. Book a feeding assessment with a Pinnacle clinician to understand exactly what your child's band means for them.

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 assessment sooner if your child is losing weight, refusing whole food groups, gagging or distressed at mealtimes, or if the safe-food list keeps shrinking rather than growing.

Try this at home

Keep mealtimes low-pressure: offer one tiny portion of a new food beside a trusted favourite, with no insistence to eat it. Let your child touch, smell or play with it — exposure without pressure is how acceptance slowly grows.

Trusted sources

Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10 · reviewed every 365 days

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 an AbilityScore of 300–400 a bad result?

No. It is not good or bad — it is a starting baseline that shows your child's current strengths and the areas where feeding needs structured support. The real value is tracking change over time against your child's own score.

Can my child's AbilityScore band change?

Yes. Bands describe a starting point, not a fixed ceiling. With structured feeding therapy, many children show measurable progress — new textures accepted, calmer mealtimes — when re-measured against their own earlier baseline.

Does this band mean my child has a diagnosis?

No. An AbilityScore band is not a diagnosis. Any diagnosis is formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under a qualified clinician's care, never from a single number or an online form.

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