
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In this episode of First Bite, Michelle Dawson, MS, CCC-SLP, CLC, BCS-S, is joined by Dr. Amy Talbot, Director and Clinical Psychologist of the Talbot Centre in Australia, to unpack the well-established overlap between Pediatric Feeding Disorder (PFD) and Avoidant Restrictive Food Intake Disorder (ARFID). For SLPs new to this area of practice, the lines between roles and responsibilities, particularly with respect to each diagnosis, can be blurry, and Dr. Talbot is here to clean it all up!
If you are curious as to what the differences are between PFD and ARFID and want to learn more about how a psychologist can contribute to the care of clients with feeding-related concerns (PFD/ARFID) as part of a multidisciplinary team, then be sure to join this conversation.
By the end of the hour, Amy plans to equip guests with strategies for building relationships with suitably trained or qualified psychologists as part of their referral network, aiming to grow a robust interprofessional practice team.
Show Notes:
Feeding Matters: https://www.feedingmatters.org
Talbot Centre: https://thetalbotcentre.com.au
Butterfly Foundation: https://butterfly.org.au
About the Guest(s): Dr Amy Talbot (she/her) is a multi-award-winning clinical psychologist and director of The Talbot Centre, a multidisciplinary service in Sydney. Her work focuses on eating, feeding, and body image concerns, with an emphasis on neurodiversity-affirming, family-centred care. Amy is a sought-after presenter, supervisor, and researcher, known for advancing interdisciplinary approaches to complex case formulation and integrating lived experience perspectives to improve outcomes for individuals with ARFID and related feeding disorders.
Follow First Bite: https://linktr.ee/FirstBitePodcast
Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/36kfA1xbU156vHPilALVoJ?si=086bed1210af45d5
Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/first-bite/id1399630680
By Michelle Dawson, MS, CCC-SLP, CLC, BCS-S4.7
213213 ratings
In this episode of First Bite, Michelle Dawson, MS, CCC-SLP, CLC, BCS-S, is joined by Dr. Amy Talbot, Director and Clinical Psychologist of the Talbot Centre in Australia, to unpack the well-established overlap between Pediatric Feeding Disorder (PFD) and Avoidant Restrictive Food Intake Disorder (ARFID). For SLPs new to this area of practice, the lines between roles and responsibilities, particularly with respect to each diagnosis, can be blurry, and Dr. Talbot is here to clean it all up!
If you are curious as to what the differences are between PFD and ARFID and want to learn more about how a psychologist can contribute to the care of clients with feeding-related concerns (PFD/ARFID) as part of a multidisciplinary team, then be sure to join this conversation.
By the end of the hour, Amy plans to equip guests with strategies for building relationships with suitably trained or qualified psychologists as part of their referral network, aiming to grow a robust interprofessional practice team.
Show Notes:
Feeding Matters: https://www.feedingmatters.org
Talbot Centre: https://thetalbotcentre.com.au
Butterfly Foundation: https://butterfly.org.au
About the Guest(s): Dr Amy Talbot (she/her) is a multi-award-winning clinical psychologist and director of The Talbot Centre, a multidisciplinary service in Sydney. Her work focuses on eating, feeding, and body image concerns, with an emphasis on neurodiversity-affirming, family-centred care. Amy is a sought-after presenter, supervisor, and researcher, known for advancing interdisciplinary approaches to complex case formulation and integrating lived experience perspectives to improve outcomes for individuals with ARFID and related feeding disorders.
Follow First Bite: https://linktr.ee/FirstBitePodcast
Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/36kfA1xbU156vHPilALVoJ?si=086bed1210af45d5
Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/first-bite/id1399630680

172,083 Listeners

12,087 Listeners

6,435 Listeners

8,748 Listeners

222 Listeners

165,123 Listeners

47 Listeners

6,296 Listeners

13,966 Listeners

124 Listeners

27 Listeners

7,644 Listeners

421 Listeners

15,346 Listeners

29,297 Listeners

6 Listeners

3,712 Listeners

12 Listeners

2 Listeners

9 Listeners

7 Listeners

7 Listeners