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Evidence-Based Oral Motor Feeding Therapy Oct26

Mon, 19 Oct

|

Live Zoom Workshop, Recording Available

You asked, we listened! Back by popular demand for a SECOND run in 2026, join Katherine & Holly as they clear up the confusion about oral motor therapy for feeding challenges, with lots of practical clinical strategies and case examples to build your knowledge and clinical confidence.

Evidence-Based Oral Motor Feeding Therapy Oct26
Evidence-Based Oral Motor Feeding Therapy Oct26

Time & Location

19 Oct 2026, 9:00 am – 4:00 pm AEDT

Live Zoom Workshop, Recording Available

About the event

Can I use a chewy tube? Do those exercises actually work?


After sold-out events in 2023, 2024, 2025 and 2026, this popular workshop is back once again to bring Speech Pathologists the essentials they need to know about oral motor interventions for paediatric feeding. Dr Katherine Sanchez and Holly Tickner have teamed up to deliver a workshop all about the often-confusing topic of Oral Motor Therapy (OMT) for paediatric feeding.


This workshop will:

  • Describe the consensus definition for Paediatric Feeding Disorder (PFD) - Oral Skills subtype, and how it relates to oral motor dysfunction

  • Identify the principles of motor learning and neural plasticity relevant to feeding skill development and intervention

  • Identify assessment tools that provide evidence-based data for outcome measurement, goal setting and therapy planning


Tickets

  • Live Workshop & Recording

    Sale ends

    12 Oct, 8:33 pm AEDT

    $475.00

    +$47.50 GST

    +$13.06 ticket service fee

  • Recording ONLY Ticket

    This ticket is for access to the recorded version of the event only.

    $450.00

    +$45.00 GST

    +$12.38 ticket service fee

    Sale ended

Total

$0.00

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Next Bite

Speech pathology and dietetics for children with paediatric feeding disorder and other feeding and mealtime differences. 

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© 2025 Next Bite Paediatric Feeding Centre

Next Bite acknowledges the Traditional Owners of the land where we work and live, the Whadjuk Nyoongar people, and pay our respects to Elders past and present. This land always was, and always will be Aboriginal land. Sovereignty was never ceded.

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