Refusing to eat, doesn’t communicate help!

Hi, my grandson is 32 months old, he has never spoken a word, occasional squeal. He has always struggled to eat, he lived on a few chicken nuggets, rich tea biscuit for months but for the last 3 weeka he isn’t eating anything. He has nutritional drinks from the dietician, as he only put on 3lb weight last year. Does anyone have any ideas how we can get him to eat, he is becoming lethargic, we have rang the GP, speech and language to see if they can see him, awaiting for them to contact us. It’s so upsetting to see Pensive

Parents
  • Sorry to hear you and your family are going through this.
    It's likely we will need more context before we can adequately give any "advice": we cannot legally give any definitive medical advice (it's against the rules of the forum too) we are just autistic members of the public really. We can only tell you what worked for us, we can't tell you what to do to fix your situation.

    Is he maintaining his percentile on a growth chart even if weight gain is slow?

    Is he diagnosed as autistic?

    If it's only suspected he is autistic then why is it suspected, and is it possible his situation is attributable to something else? Global developmental delay? Sensory perception disorder? Generic toddler fussy eating?

    Identifying something acccurately is the first step to seeking effective help.

Reply
  • Sorry to hear you and your family are going through this.
    It's likely we will need more context before we can adequately give any "advice": we cannot legally give any definitive medical advice (it's against the rules of the forum too) we are just autistic members of the public really. We can only tell you what worked for us, we can't tell you what to do to fix your situation.

    Is he maintaining his percentile on a growth chart even if weight gain is slow?

    Is he diagnosed as autistic?

    If it's only suspected he is autistic then why is it suspected, and is it possible his situation is attributable to something else? Global developmental delay? Sensory perception disorder? Generic toddler fussy eating?

    Identifying something acccurately is the first step to seeking effective help.

Children
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