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My child pickles in front of his plate! How to approach dysorality in general practice Volume 14, issue 8, Octobre 2018

Authors
1 Département de médecine générale, Faculté de médecine Jacques Lisfranc, Université Jean Monnet, CAMPUS SANTÉ INNOVATIONS, 42270 Saint-Priest-en-Jarez
2 Département de sociologie, Université Toulouse Jean-Jaurès, CERTOP - UMR CNRS 5044, France, 31058 Toulouse Cedex 9
3 Centre Léo Kanner, service de psychopathologie de l’enfant et de l’adolescent, CHU hôpital Nord, 42055 Saint-Étienne Cedex
* Tirés à part

Food is part of a child's daily life, also invested by his parents to make him discover the pleasure of meals. But when he picks and chooses, the difficulties affect the whole family, and the parents turn to their general practitioner. The educational question is often given as an explanation for these complaints, because the concept of dysorality is recent and not well known. The objective of this study was to provide general practitioners with assistance adapted to their needs regarding the diagnosis and orientation of children with dysorality.

Licence This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License