
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Guest: Amy Delaney, PhD, CCC-SLP
Earn 0.1 ASHA CEU for this episode with Speech Therapy PD: https://www.speechtherapypd.com/courses/research-to-chew-on
If pediatric feeding and swallowing are your passion, you won’t want to miss this conversation on First Bite. Host Michelle Dawson, MS, CCC-SLP, CLC, BCS-S, welcomes Dr. Amy Delaney, PhD, CCC-SLP, from Marquette University to share the latest findings from the Neurodevelopmental Feeding and Swallowing Lab. Dr. Delaney unpacks neurodevelopmental norms, ongoing research in Pediatric Feeding Disorder (PFD), and key insights from her recent publication on texture progression. With her expertise, you’ll gain a clearer understanding of how evidence is shaping clinical practice and what it means for the future of pediatric feeding.
Whether you’re looking to sharpen your knowledge base or stay up to date with cutting-edge research, this episode offers practical and impactful takeaways you can bring straight to your work with children and families.
About the Guest: Amy Delaney, PhD, CCC-SLP, is an Assistant Professor in Speech Pathology and Audiology at Marquette University. She is the Director of the Neurodevelopmental Feeding and Swallowing Lab, which focuses on establishing a normative reference for feeding development to identify diagnostic criteria and assessment tools for the early and accurate diagnosis of pediatric feeding disorders (PFDs). Amy worked at Children’s Hospital of Wisconsin for 20 years, specializing in advanced diagnostics and intervention for PFD and pediatric dysphagia in medically complex children. She is a Founding Member of the Medical Professional Council and currently serves as the Chair of the Educational Pillar for Feeding Matters. Amy co-authored the Infant and Child Feeding Questionnaire© and the PFD consensus paper by Goday et al. in 2019. She enjoys walking her mini Bernedoodle, being goofy with her 10-year-old daughter, and coaching soccer.
By Michelle Dawson, MS, CCC-SLP, CLC, BCS-S, FNAP4.7
213213 ratings
Guest: Amy Delaney, PhD, CCC-SLP
Earn 0.1 ASHA CEU for this episode with Speech Therapy PD: https://www.speechtherapypd.com/courses/research-to-chew-on
If pediatric feeding and swallowing are your passion, you won’t want to miss this conversation on First Bite. Host Michelle Dawson, MS, CCC-SLP, CLC, BCS-S, welcomes Dr. Amy Delaney, PhD, CCC-SLP, from Marquette University to share the latest findings from the Neurodevelopmental Feeding and Swallowing Lab. Dr. Delaney unpacks neurodevelopmental norms, ongoing research in Pediatric Feeding Disorder (PFD), and key insights from her recent publication on texture progression. With her expertise, you’ll gain a clearer understanding of how evidence is shaping clinical practice and what it means for the future of pediatric feeding.
Whether you’re looking to sharpen your knowledge base or stay up to date with cutting-edge research, this episode offers practical and impactful takeaways you can bring straight to your work with children and families.
About the Guest: Amy Delaney, PhD, CCC-SLP, is an Assistant Professor in Speech Pathology and Audiology at Marquette University. She is the Director of the Neurodevelopmental Feeding and Swallowing Lab, which focuses on establishing a normative reference for feeding development to identify diagnostic criteria and assessment tools for the early and accurate diagnosis of pediatric feeding disorders (PFDs). Amy worked at Children’s Hospital of Wisconsin for 20 years, specializing in advanced diagnostics and intervention for PFD and pediatric dysphagia in medically complex children. She is a Founding Member of the Medical Professional Council and currently serves as the Chair of the Educational Pillar for Feeding Matters. Amy co-authored the Infant and Child Feeding Questionnaire© and the PFD consensus paper by Goday et al. in 2019. She enjoys walking her mini Bernedoodle, being goofy with her 10-year-old daughter, and coaching soccer.

172,057 Listeners

12,080 Listeners

6,441 Listeners

8,859 Listeners

221 Listeners

166,185 Listeners

47 Listeners

6,214 Listeners

13,948 Listeners

124 Listeners

27 Listeners

7,620 Listeners

420 Listeners

15,375 Listeners

29,273 Listeners

6 Listeners

3,713 Listeners

12 Listeners

3 Listeners

9 Listeners

7 Listeners

7 Listeners