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The Untethered Podcast™
Episode 263: Breathing Easy : Link Between Orthodontics, Speech & Health with Dr. Svitlana Koval, DMD, MSc, BD and Tiffany Zilberman M.S. CCC-SLP
This week on the podcast, Hallie dives deep into the world of orthodontics with Dr. Svitlana Koval, an airway orthodontist and Tiffany Zilberman, a pediatric feeding specialist and myofunctional therapist. They challenge the traditional view of orthodontics, highlighting the importance of early intervention and care throughout all life stages.
The conversation explores how orthodontics can impact not just your smile, but also your speech, breathing, and overall health. They discuss the connection between airway health, orthodontics, myofunctional therapy, feeding therapy and speech therapy, emphasizing the need for a holistic approach.
Learn the difference between traditional orthodontics focused solely on teeth alignment and airway orthodontics that considers the entire airway system and more!
If this episode has resonated with you in some way, take a screenshot of you listening, post it to your Instagram Stories, and tag Hallie @halliebulkin, Dr. Svitlana @drsvitlanakoval, and Tiffany @littleeatersfl
For more episodes visit www.untetheredpodcast.com
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377. Why Great Therapy Starts With Better Parent Conversations
40:17||Ep. 377As pediatric therapists, we know that our time with a child is only one small piece of the puzzle. Real, lasting progress happens when parents and caregivers feel confident carrying strategies into everyday family life. Yet, navigating parent communication can sometimes feel like its own clinical challenge.In this episode, Hallie sits down with Johanna Stadtmauer, MS, CCC-SLP, a pediatric speech-language pathologist, feeding therapist, and owner of Ready Stadt Speech. Johanna shares her passion for family-centered care, breaking down how clinicians can intentionally weave counseling skills and active listening into their daily practice to meet parents exactly where they are.They explore how Johanna uses innovative practice models like caregiver classes to build a supportive local community, and dive into how private practice owners can leverage social media and AI tools responsibly without losing the human connection that defines excellent therapy. Whether you’re looking to deepen your rapport with families or want actionable insights on clinical entrepreneurship, this interview offers a refreshing, holistic roadmap.About the Guest: Johanna Stadtmauer, MS, CCC-SLPJohanna Stadtmauer is a pediatric speech-language pathologist, feeding therapist, and the owner of Ready Stadt Speech, serving families in Northern Bergen County, New Jersey. Specializing in the early stages of speech, language, feeding, and literacy development, Johanna is also an SLP consultant and advisor. As both a clinician and a mother to three young children, she brings a uniquely relatable perspective to child development, helping parents feel genuinely empowered rather than overwhelmed.Key Topics & TakeawaysCounseling Skills in Action: Moving past rigid clinical updates and incorporating active listening to facilitate goal-focused, empathetic conversations with caregivers.Building Community Beyond the Table: How designing and promoting local caregiver classes transforms isolated parenting struggles into shared community experiences.Responsible Tech Integration: Navigating the role of AI in modern practice—using tools like Glint to support administrative tasks or visual creation while fully preserving human judgment and clinical intuition.Grounding in Your "Why": Why keeping your core mission at the forefront is the ultimate guide for sustainable private practice growth and marketing alignment.The Multidisciplinary Approach: Empowering families by fostering a holistic care team that treats the whole child.Soundbites"Be transparent with families about what to expect. True collaboration starts with setting clear, honest expectations.""AI can support but it can never replace human connection. Our empathy and clinical intuition are irreplaceable.""Know your 'why' to guide your practice and growth. When things get complex, your core mission is your compass."Timestamps02:18 The Importance of Communication in Therapy 05:25 Navigating Challenges in Therapy 11:11 Building Community Through Caregiver Classes 14:38 Marketing and Positioning in Private Practice 19:09 The Absolute Importance of Human Connection 22:42 Navigating AI in Therapy Responsibly 27:44 Understanding Your Why 31:32 Building a Holistic Care Team 33:58 Empowering Families in Therapy 37:48 The Journey of an SLP EntrepreneurLinks & ResourcesVisit Johanna’s Website: readystatsspeech.comFollow Johanna on Instagram: @ReadyStadtSpeechWORTH A LISTEN: CONTINUE YOUR JOURNEYEpisode 371: When You Screen a Child and Think 'Now What?'Episode 372: From Guessing to Growth: How a Clear Framework Transformed My PracticeSTAY CONNECTED & GROW YOUR PRACTICEJoin the conversation: Get behind-the-scenes insights, clinical pearls, and real conversations over on Substack.
376. Am I Looking at a Feeding Problem or an Airway Problem?
24:59||Ep. 376When a child struggles with feeding, it’s easy to get laser-focused on oral-motor exercises or sensory strategies. But what if the root cause isn't a lack of coordination, but a struggle to breathe?In this solo episode, Hallie Bulkin dives deep into a critical, yet frequently missed, component of pediatric feeding therapy: airway screening. Airway issues often hide in plain sight, quietly undermining feeding progress and leaving clinicians wondering why their traditional treatment plans have stalled.Hallie breaks down the undeniable connection between airway health, posture, and feeding mechanics. She highlights the specific signs of airway obstruction every therapist should look out for, outlines clear referral pathways, and explains why screening the airway is fully within your scope of practice. If you want to elevate your clinical outcomes and treat the whole child with true clarity and intention, this episode is a must-listen.Key Topics & TakeawaysAirway in Scope: Why airway screening is not a luxury or a sub-specialty—it is a foundational part of your clinical scope as a feeding therapist.Signs of Airway Obstruction: Recognizing the red flags of compromised breathing, from subtle mouth breathing and poor daytime posture to severe nighttime sleep disturbances.Feeding Mechanics & Tongue Position: How an unsupported airway forces compensatory tongue resting positions, instantly disrupting the mechanics required for safe and efficient chewing and swallowing.The Posture Connection: Why children with airway issues alter their head and neck alignment just to breathe, and how this compromised posture stalls feeding progress.Navigating the Referral Pathway: Knowing exactly when to step back and coordinate care with an ENT or airway-focused specialist before proceeding with direct feeding intervention.Soundbites"Airway screening is not outside your lane - it is a vital part of your scope as a feeding therapist.""If a child is struggling to breathe, their nervous system will always prioritize oxygen over eating. Tongue position impacts feeding mechanics, but airway dictates tongue position.""We cannot out-therapy an airway obstruction. Sleep disturbances and daytime breathing struggles will always affect feeding outcomes."Timestamps01:15 Why Airway Screening Matters03:00 The Biggest Mistake Feeding Therapists Make06:01 Why Airway Is Often Missed in Training09:00 What Airway Dysfunction Looks Like12:00 The Medical System's Blind Spot15:02 Airway Screening: What to Look For18:00 Real-World Case Results & Outcomes21:00 How to Start Screening for Airway Issues24:00 Final Thoughts & Resources Download the Packet here: https://www.feedthepeds.com/f-a-s-t-myo-screening-packet-3WORTH A LISTEN: CONTINUE YOUR JOURNEYEpisode 371: When You Screen a Child and Think 'Now What?'Episode 369: The 4 Layers of Feeding: How to Finally Know Where to StartSTAY CONNECTED & GROW YOUR PRACTICEJoin the conversation: Get behind-the-scenes insights, clinical pearls, and real conversations over on Substack.
375. Dr. Richard Baxter on How to Know If a Tongue Tie Is Really the Problem
52:04||Ep. 375When looking into tethered oral tissues, it is easy to focus entirely on visual structural appearance. However, judging a restriction by looks alone frequently misses the true clinical picture. Real progress happens when healthcare providers shift the diagnostic paradigm away from what a tie looks like and focus entirely on how it affects dynamic function over a patient's lifespan.In this episode, Hallie sits down with Dr. Richard Baxter, DMD, MS, FAAPD, a board-certified pediatric dentist, founder of the Alabama Tongue-Tie Center, and lead author of the bestselling book Tongue-Tied. Dr. Baxter shares his personal and professional insights into the complexities of identifying oral restrictions, moving past basic anatomical definitions to explore how a tiny string under the tongue can alter systemic, long-term health.About the Guest: Dr. Richard BaxterDr. Richard Baxter is a board-certified pediatric dentist, a Fellow of the American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry (AAPD), a Diplomate of the American Board of Laser Surgery, and the founder of the Alabama Tongue-Tie Center. As an internationally recognized speaker and creator of the Tongue-Tied Academy, he has dedicated his career to educating healthcare providers and parents on the structural and functional impacts of oral restrictions. Having experienced a tongue-tie himself and treated his three daughters as infants, his dedication to the field is deeply personal. He resides in Birmingham, Alabama, with his family.Key Topics & TakeawaysSymptoms Over Appearance: Why a visual exam never tells the full story and why diagnostic protocols must prioritize symptom functional profiles over pure aesthetics.Groundbreaking Research in Complex Profiles: Dr. Baxter shares fascinating insights from recent research surrounding oral restrictions and their structural correlations to cerebral palsy.Buccal and Lip Ties Exploded: Clarifying the distinct functional impacts of cheek and lip restrictions, and how they play a role in infant feeding dynamics.The Interdisciplinary Standard: Best practices for post-operative care, follow-up timelines, and maintaining clear, collaborative communication lines across the therapy team.Soundbites"Common does not mean normal." "Digestion starts in the mouth.""Untie the shoelaces for proper function."Timestamps00:00:00 – Intro Hook: The Shoelace Analogy breakdown.00:01:03 – Guest Welcome: Dr. Richard Baxter joins the show.00:02:43 – Clinical Debate: Treating oral restrictions based on symptoms vs. appearance.00:06:51 – Collaborative Care: How a therapist should present a concise, one-page case review to a doctor.00:09:13 – The Post-Op Rule: Why myofunctional therapy is essential (The knee surgery comparison).00:11:51 – Clinical Truths: Why "common" does not mean "normal" when tracking snoring or mouth-breathing.00:13:08 – Complex Case Study: Dr. Baxter's landmark research on tongue-tie releases in children with Cerebral Palsy.00:20:27 – Digestion & The Nervous System: How poor swallowing mechanics trigger chronic fight-or-flight states.00:26:49 – Emerging Research: Survey insights on identifying and treating Buccal (cheek) ties globally.00:32:24 – The Bed-Wetting Link: The surprising connection between airway stress, heart peptides, and nocturnal polyuria.00:48:28 – Reclaiming "No-Man's Land": Why releasing ties between 6 months and 4 years old is critical for core brain development.Links & ResourcesRead the Best Selling Book: Tongue-Tied by Dr. Richard BaxterExplore Clinical Resources: Visit TongueTie.comWatch and Learn: Tune into Dr. Baxter's YouTube ChannelWORTH A LISTEN: CONTINUE YOUR JOURNEYEpisode 200: Functional Impact: When A Tongue Tie Is ACTUALLY A Tongue TieEP 348: Tongue Ties, Sleep Apnea & More: The Patient-Centered Approach to Airway DentistrySTAY CONNECTED & GROW YOUR PRACTICEJoin the conversation: Get behind-the-scenes insights, clinical pearls, and real conversations over on Substack.
374. How My Son’s Down Syndrome Diagnosis Changed Me as a Feeding Therapist
57:24||Ep. 374Making the leap from a school-based setting into a specialized pediatric feeding niche is an incredible professional transformation. But what happens when that career pivot collides with your own deeply personal parenting journey?In this episode, Hallie sits down with Aerica Walsh, M.S., CCC-SLP, CPFT™, an ASHA-certified speech-language pathologist, pediatric feeding therapist, and the founder of Thrive Therapy Solutions. Aerica opens up about her unique path into the world of pediatric feeding—a journey that took a profoundly meaningful turn when her daughter was born with tongue and lip ties that impacted their early breastfeeding dynamic, followed by her son being born with Down syndrome and diagnostic feeding challenges.They dive into the common medical misconceptions surrounding low tone and special needs, the reality of balancing deep grief with profound gratitude as a parent, and the heavy advocacy needed in hospital and NICU settings. This conversation is an invaluable mix of raw personal storytelling, actionable clinical advice, and a beautiful reminder of why compassionate, holistic, family-centered care always trumps generic medical protocols.Key Topics & TakeawaysThe Leap From Schools to Feeding: How Aerica navigated the transition from a traditional school-based SLP caseload into the highly specialized world of feeding therapy.A Diagnosis in the Middle of Training: Aerica shares the emotional and clinical impact of receiving her child's Down syndrome diagnosis while completing her specialized CPFT™ program.The "Low Tone" Misconception: A close look at why low muscle tone is so frequently misunderstood in children with Down syndrome, and how to look past a label to find functional solutions.The Power of Pre-Feeding Skills: Practical strategies for supporting vital pre-feeding motor skills long before a child with special needs ever takes their first bite of solids.Advocacy & "The Mama Gut": Why clinical reasoning and motherly intuition should always come before generic medical timelines in hospital and NICU environments.Building Thrive Therapy Solutions: The challenges, rewards, and exact mindset shifts required to successfully launch your own specialized private practice while parenting children with additional needs.Soundbites"Low tone is often misunderstood in Down syndrome" "Trust your mama gut over medical protocols" "Find your niche and dive deep into it"Timestamps00:00 – Intro Clip00:20 – Welcome to the Untethered Podcast00:57 – Meet Aerica Walsh, M.S., CCC-SLP, CPFT™02:10 – How Motherhood Led Aerica Into Feeding Therapy04:35 – Pregnancy Expectations vs Reality07:15 – Parenting a Child With Additional Needs10:25 – NICU Experience & Early Feeding Challenges13:40 – The Overwhelming Amount of Parenting Advice15:00 – Identifying Feeding & Development Concerns18:20 – Tongue Ties, Breastfeeding & Early Intervention21:45 – Navigating Medical Professionals & Parent Advocacy25:00 – Hospital Experiences & Emotional Impact28:15 – Why Standardized Feeding Support Matters30:00 – Gaps in Pediatric & Feeding Education34:10 – Supporting Families Beyond Clinical Care37:50 – The Emotional Side of Motherhood & Therapy40:00 – Learning to Trust Your Parent Instincts43:25 – Helping Parents Feel Seen & Supported46:40 – Balancing Family Life & Professional Growth50:00 – Building a Career in Feeding Therapy52:30 – Advice for Clinicians Entering Feeding Therapy55:00 – Investing in Education & Mentorship57:00 – Final Thoughts & OutroLinks & ResourcesConnect with Aerica: Follow her on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/thrivewithaerica/WORTH A LISTEN: CONTINUE YOUR JOURNEYEP 343: Inside a Mission-Driven Pediatric Feeding PracticeEpisode 361: Why Two Therapists Get Different Feeding Outcomes (And How to Fix ItSTAY CONNECTED & GROW YOUR PRACTICEJoin the conversation: Get behind-the-scenes insights, clinical pearls, and real conversations over on Substack.
373. Is the Tethered Oral Tissue the Problem or Just Part of It?
16:18||Ep. 373Navigating the world of tethered oral tissues (TOTs) can often feel like wading through murky waters. With so much conflicting information out there, it’s incredibly easy for clinicians to fall into the trap of letting a visual anatomical structure dictate their entire treatment plan. But looking at a tongue or lip tie doesn’t tell you the whole story.In this solo episode, Hallie Bulkin dives deep into the complexities of diagnosing and treating tethered oral tissues during feeding evaluations. She pulls back the curtain on why presence does not automatically equal cause, and why a systematic, function-first approach is the only way to truly help your pediatric patients.Whether you are feeling the pressure from families to provide quick answers or trying to differentiate between a primary and secondary driver of a feeding challenge, this episode is a crucial masterclass in clinical decision-making. Tune in to learn how to move past the anatomy trap and build ultimate confidence in your functional assessments.Key Topics & TakeawaysThe Murky Waters of TOTs: Why diagnosing and treating tethered oral tissues has become a clinical minefield, and how to navigate it safely.Presence vs. Cause: A critical reminder that just because an anatomical tie exists does not mean it is the primary driver of the family's feeding struggles.Common Clinical Traps: How relying solely on visual anatomy can lead to incomplete treatment plans and poor patient outcomes.The Function-First Framework: Why evaluating dynamic feeding function is the only way to give structural anatomy its true meaning.Primary vs. Secondary Drivers: Learn how to decipher when a tie is the root cause of a feeding issue versus when it is simply an incidental finding.Soundbites"Don't let anatomy lead your feeding plan.""Presence does not equal cause.""Feeding function gives anatomy its true meaning."Timestamps00:00 – Introduction to Tethered Oral Tissues and clinical challenges.01:24 – The murky waters of diagnosis and the role of anatomy.02:32 – Understanding feeding challenges as multifactorial.03:02 – Limitations of relying solely on anatomy.04:22 – Common clinical traps in tethered oral tissue cases (Traps 1 & 2).05:11 – Trap No. 3: Treating the restriction instead of the feeding pattern.07:13 – Trap No. 4: Skipping a full feeding assessment because the tie feels explanatory.07:50 – Pressure to provide quick answers and the importance of function.08:15 – Shifting focus to feeding function over anatomy.09:21 – Feeding function as the key to meaningful anatomy interpretation.10:00 – Primary vs. secondary drivers of feeding difficulties.11:50 – When ties are incidental and not the main issue.12:10 – Assessing functional impact and developing confidence.13:30 – The value of structured feeding assessment training.14:37 – Empowering clinicians with feeding function knowledge & final wrap-up.Links & ResourcesDive deeper with Tongue Tie BootcampWORTH A LISTEN: CONTINUE YOUR JOURNEYEpisode 348: Tongue Ties, Sleep Apnea & More: The Patient-Centered Approach to Airway DentistryEpisode 363: Tongue Ties, Oral Habits & the Future of Airway HealthSTAY CONNECTED & GROW YOUR PRACTICE💬 Join the Conversation: Catch behind-the-scenes insights and daily clinical tips onInstagram | Facebook | LinkedInIf this show has impacted your clinical practice, please leave a review. Your support helps us reach the therapists and families who need these answers most!
372. From Guessing to Growth: How a Clear Framework Transformed My Practice
44:06||Ep. 372If you’ve ever felt like you were "guessing" your way through a feeding session, you aren’t alone. In fact, many clinicians enter the field with a passion for OT or SLP, only to realize their foundational schooling barely scratched the surface of pediatric feeding.In this episode, Hallie is joined by Courtney Lewis, MOT, OTR/L, CPST, a pediatric feeding specialist and owner of NOSH Pediatric Feeding Therapy. Courtney opens up about her "long and winding road" to feeding—a journey that began with an 8th-grade project and evolved through home health, clinics, and hospitals.They discuss the pivotal moment when Courtney realized she needed more than just general experience to truly help her families. From the "regulation lightbulb" moment that changed how she views patient behavior to the deep empathy she brings as a former "picky eater" herself, this conversation is a masterclass in why specialized training and clinical reasoning are the keys to professional confidence.About the Guest: Courtney Lewis, MOT, OTR/L, CPSTCourtney Lewis is a pediatric occupational therapist, feeding specialist, and the founder of NOSH Pediatric Feeding Therapy. With over a decade of experience across various settings, she specializes in transforming mealtime struggles into joyful family experiences using a holistic, play-based approach. Courtney is a Feed The Peds® graduate and a dedicated mentor within The Pediatric Feeding Hub™.Key Topics & TakeawaysThe Accidental Specialist: How pediatric feeding "found" Courtney and why every previous setting—from home health to hospitals—was a necessary stepping stone.The Missing Link in Education: A candid look at why most therapists feel underprepared and how to fill the gaps that grad school leaves behind.The Sensory Lived Experience: Courtney shares how her own history as a picky eater allows her to advocate for her patients with a unique, firsthand perspective.44,000 CFA Points: The story behind Courtney's "Regulation Lightbulb" and how understanding the nervous system changes everything in the clinic.The Power of "The Hub": Why having a community of mentors and peers is essential for preventing burnout and ensuring clinical excellence.Soundbites"I didn't choose feeding therapy; it chose me. Every setting I worked in was leading me here.""You go from feeling like you're guessing to actually having a clinical 'why' behind what you're doing.""When you understand the nervous system, you stop looking at the behavior and start looking at the child."Timestamps000:00 – Overcoming imposter syndrome and the "stuck" feeling in feeding therapy.02:22 – Courtney’s Journey: How pediatric occupational therapy "found" her.05:47 – The Confidence Catalyst: Helping a breastfeeding infant transition to solids in 10 weeks.06:34 – The Foundational Gap: Why standard courses like SOS and Beckman sometimes leave therapists wanting more.23:40 – How Feed The Peds® provided the framework to finally "connect the dots."29:10 – Lived Experience: How being a former "picky eater" shapes Courtney’s empathy as a therapist.38:20 – Mentorship: Transitioning from student to leader within The Pediatric Feeding Hub™.42:15 – Closing thoughts and where to find NOSH Pediatric Feeding Therapy.Links & ResourcesVisit Courtney’s Website: noshfeeding.comFollow Courtney on Instagram: @NoshFeedingFeed The Peds®: Join the 3-Day Screen The Peds to Feed The Peds ChallengeTHE HUB: Become a part of The Pediatric Feeding Hub™WORTH A LISTEN: CONTINUE YOUR JOURNEYEpisode 369: The 4 Layers of Feeding: How to Finally Know Where to StartEpisode 361: Why Two Therapists Get Different Feeding Outcomes (And How to Fix It)STAY CONNECTED & GROW YOUR PRACTICE💬 Join the Conversation: Catch behind-the-scenes insights and daily clinical tips onInstagram | Facebook | LinkedInIf this show has impacted your clinical practice, please leave a review. Your support helps us reach the therapists and families who need these answers most!
371. When You Screen a Child and Think 'Now What?
10:55||Ep. 371In this solo episode, Hallie Bulkin dives deep into a common pitfall in pediatric feeding therapy: treating red flags as a diagnosis rather than a starting point. Many clinicians feel the pressure to jump straight into treatment the moment a concern is raised, but skipping the foundational steps often leads to stalled progress and clinical uncertainty.Hallie clarifies the critical distinction between screening, assessment, and treatment. She explains why red flags should be viewed as "decision points" and how a structured screening process can transform your clinical decision-making. Whether you are navigating complex sensory issues or safety concerns, this episode provides a systematic framework to help you move forward with clarity and intention.About the Host: Hallie BulkinHallie Bulkin, MA, CCC-SLP, CMT®, CPFT™, is a pediatric feeding and orofacial myofunctional therapist and the founder of Elevation Movement. With years of experience in pediatric feeding, myo, airway, and tethered oral tissues, Hallie is dedicated to empowering clinicians with the tools they need to provide life-changing therapy for children and their families. Key Topics & TakeawaysRed Flags as Decision Points: Understanding why a red flag is a signal for more data, not a roadmap for immediate therapy.The Power of Structured Screening: How a checklist removes the guesswork and identifies specific risks.The Clinical Sequence: Why the order of Screening → Assessment → Treatment is non-negotiable for successful outcomes.Avoiding Common Pitfalls: Why relying solely on parent reports or mislabeling limited variety as "just sensory" can hinder progress.Building Confidence: How a systematic approach reduces "imposter syndrome" and helps you know exactly what to do next.Soundbites"Red flags are decision points, not treatment plans.""Screening answers the vital question: Is further assessment even needed?""Jumping straight to treatment skips the assessment phase entirely."Timestamps00:00 – Red Flags: The Doorway to the Next Step00:36 – Introduction: Meet Your Host, Hallie Bulkin01:52 – The "Now What?" Moment in Feeding Therapy02:54 – Why Structured Screening is Not Optional03:48 – Screening vs. Assessment: Solving the Sequencing Issue04:22 – Mistake #1: Treating Parent Concern as the Only Data Point05:27 – Mistake #2: Equating Limited Variety with Sensory Issues06:17 – Mistake #3: Skipping the Safety & Airway Layer07:22 – What a Strong Feeding Screening Checklist Actually Does08:24 – The 3-Step Sequence: Screening, Assessment, and Treatment09:34 – Case Example: Moving from Red Flags to Clarity10:30 – Building Confidence & The "Screen The Peds" Free Training👉 Join the free 3-day Screen The Peds to Feed The Peds trainingWORTH A LISTEN: CONTINUE YOUR JOURNEYWhy Two Therapists Get Different Feeding Outcomes (And How to Fix It)The 4 Layers of Feeding: How to Finally Know Where to StartSTAY CONNECTED & GROW YOUR PRACTICE💬 Join the Conversation: Catch behind-the-scenes insights and daily clinical tips onInstagram | Facebook | LinkedInIf this show has impacted your clinical practice, please leave a review. Your support helps us reach the therapists and families who need these answers most!
370. Why Your CFY Doesn’t Prepare You for Feeding Therapy (And What Actually Does)
48:06||Ep. 370In this interview episode, Abigail Kemp shares her honest journey through her Clinical Fellowship Year (CFY) and into the world of pediatric feeding therapy. Like many new clinicians, Abigail quickly realized that academic knowledge alone wasn’t enough—especially when faced with the complexity of real-life feeding cases.She opens up about the challenges of navigating unclear expectations, limited mentorship, and the pressure to perform early in her career. Through these experiences, Abigail discovered the power of self-advocacy, continuous learning, and finding the right support system to grow as a clinician.This episode offers a grounded and relatable perspective for therapists who feel overwhelmed or unsure—reminding you that confidence isn’t about knowing everything, but about learning how to think, adapt, and take action.About the Guest: Abigail KempAbigail Kemp, M.S., CCC-SLP, is a speech-language pathologist who began her clinical career in 2024, gaining experience across pediatric clinics, preschool and daycare settings, elementary schools, as well as adult outpatient and acute care.While she had strong academic exposure—particularly in dysphagia—her early clinical experience in pediatric feeding therapy presented unexpected challenges. During her CFY, Abigail was faced with feeding cases that pushed her beyond her comfort zone, often without the level of mentorship and guidance she needed.Abigail continues to expand her expertise in feeding therapy and hopes to further specialize in the field. She encourages new clinicians to advocate for themselves, ask questions, and trust that growth takes time—but is always worth the journey.Key Topics & TakeawaysThe Reality of CFY Challenges:Why many new clinicians feel unprepared—and how real growth happens after graduation.The Power of Mentorship & Community:How the right environment can accelerate your confidence and clinical development.Building Confidence in Feeding Therapy:Why confidence comes from action, not perfection.Self-Advocacy in Clinical Practice:How speaking up and seeking support can transform your career trajectory.Individualized Feeding Therapy:Why no two clients are the same—and treatment must reflect that.Soundbites“I realized how little I knew about feeding.”“Treatment strategies must be individualized.”“Support and mentorship are crucial in our field.”Timestamps00:00 – Introduction to Abigail Kemp01:43 – Early Career and the Clinical Fellowship Year (CFY)03:39 – Navigating Expectations in a New Pediatric Clinic05:39 – Challenges of Remote Mentorship and the First 4 Months06:56 – Finding a New Setting & The Power of Self-Advocacy08:21 – Facing the First Pediatric Feeding Client (approximate transition based on the flow of setting change)10:58 – Discovering "Feed The Peds" and Pediatric Feeding Courses17:16 – Balancing Practice in School and Clinic Settings21:38 – Navigating Ethical Dilemmas and Professional Integrity25:20 – Practical Application: Using Clinical Knowledge at Home47:24 – Final Advice for New Clinicians & Closing RemarksIf you’re feeling unsure where to start in pediatric feeding, Screen The Peds to Feed The Peds is the perfect next step.Join me for this free 3-day training, where I’ll show you how to screen feeding cases clearly, confidently, and with intention — so you know what to do next.👉 Join the free 3-day Screen The Peds to Feed The Peds trainingWORTH A LISTEN: CONTINUE YOUR JOURNEYWhy Two Therapists Get Different Feeding Outcomes (And How to Fix It)When Imposter Syndrome Shows Up in Pediatric Feeding Therapy (and What to Do Next)STAY CONNECTED & GROW YOUR PRACTICE💬 Join the Conversation: Catch behind-the-scenes insights and daily clinical tips onInstagram | Facebook | LinkedInIf this show has impacted your clinical practice, please leave a review. Your support helps us reach the therapists and families who need these answers most!
369. The 4 Layers of Feeding: How to Finally Know Where to Start
11:37||Ep. 369In this solo episode, Hallie Bulkin dives deep into the "noise" of complex feeding therapy. When a child presents with multiple overlapping issues, it’s easy for clinicians to feel stuck. Hallie explains why the secret to better outcomes isn't working harder or using more strategies - it’s prioritization.By breaking feeding down into four essential layers, Hallie provides a framework for identifying the "primary limiter" and building a treatment plan that actually moves the needle. Whether you’re a seasoned therapist or new to the field, this episode will help you trade confusion for clinical confidence.Key Topics & TakeawaysThe Four Layers of Feeding: Understanding the hierarchy of physiological stability, oral motor skills, sensory processing, and behavior.Cutting Through the Noise: Why treating every issue at once often leads to plateaued progress and clinician burnout.Identifying the Primary Limiter: How to determine which factor is actually holding the child back from reaching their next milestone.The Foundation First Approach: Why skipping foundational stability for high-level skills is a recipe for failure.Clinical Confidence: How mastering decision-making skills changes the way you show up in the therapy room.Soundbites"The problem isn't effort, it's prioritization.""Not everything is equally urgent. If we treat everything like a priority, nothing is a priority.""Clarity in your plan builds confidence—not just for you, but for the families you serve."Timestamps02:09 – The Real Problem: Effort vs. Prioritization03:19 – The Confusion Loop: Why Feeding Cases Feel Complex04:22 – Identifying the Primary Limiter in Feeding05:05 – Layer 1: Physiological Stability05:54 – Layer 2: Oral Motor Skills06:25 – Layer 3: Sensory Processing07:01 – Layer 4: Behavior and Learned PatternsIf you’re feeling unsure where to start in pediatric feeding, Screen The Peds to Feed The Peds is the perfect next step.Join me for this free 3-day training, where I’ll show you how to screen feeding cases clearly, confidently, and with intention — so you know what to do next.👉 Join the free 3-day Screen The Peds to Feed The Peds trainingWORTH A LISTEN: CONTINUE YOUR JOURNEYWhy Two Therapists Get Different Feeding Outcomes (And How to Fix It)Why Pediatric Feeding Therapy Feels So Hard and What’s Been MissingSTAY CONNECTED & GROW YOUR PRACTICE💬 Join the Conversation: Catch behind-the-scenes insights and daily clinical tips onInstagram | Facebook | LinkedInIf this show has impacted your clinical practice, please leave a review. Your support helps us reach the therapists and families who need these answers most!