New consensus definition on defining and measuring care for children with paediatric feeding disorder

J Paediatr Child Health. 2024 Feb-Mar;60(2-3):58-66. doi: 10.1111/jpc.16534. Epub 2024 Apr 6.

Abstract

Aim: This study addresses the absence of a definition of care for children with feeding disorders, limited agreement on key performance indicators (KPIs), and the lack of data linked to those KPIs.

Methods: Clinicians, consumers and researchers involved in outpatient feeding care in New South Wales (NSW), Australia were invited to participate in a two-Phase study. In Phase 1, a modified Delphi method was used. Two rounds of voting resulted in a new consensus definition of a multidisciplinary paediatric feeding clinic. Three further rounds voting determined relevant KPIs. In Phase 2, the KPIs were piloted prospectively in 10 clinics.

Results: Twenty-six clinicians, consumers and researchers participated in Phase 1. Participation across five voting rounds declined from 92% to 60% and a valid definition and KPI set were created. In Phase 2, the definition and KPIs were piloted in 10 clinics over 6 weeks. Data for 110 patients were collected. The final KPI set of 28 measures proposed covers clinical features, patient demographics and medical issues, parent-child interaction and outcome measures.

Conclusions: A new definition of a multidisciplinary paediatric feeding clinic is now available, linked to a standardised KPI set covering relevant performance measures. These proved viable in baseline data collection for 10 clinics across NSW. This sets a foundation for further data collection, systematic measurement of care provision and outcomes, and research needed to deliver care improvement for children with paediatric feeding disorder.

Keywords: Delphi technique; feeding disorder; outcome assessment, health care; paediatric; parent.

MeSH terms

  • Ambulatory Care Facilities*
  • Ambulatory Care*
  • Australia
  • Consensus
  • Delphi Technique
  • Humans
  • New South Wales