Sensory food profile:
what is it for and how to use it?
Complete presentation of the DYNSEO tool, concrete usage methods, and practical tips for mapping food sensitivities and guiding support for oral disorders
The DYNSEO sensory food profile is one of the most requested tools in the catalog — and for good reason: eating oral disorders affect millions of people in France, are often misunderstood by family members and non-specialized professionals, and cruelly lack accessible and free assessment tools. This guide precisely presents what this tool is, what it contains, who it is aimed at, and how to use it in every context to get the most out of it.
1. The sensory food profile: what is it exactly?
The sensory food profile is a tool for assessing and mapping food sensory sensitivities. It allows for a precise and structured picture of a person's sensory relationship with food — dimension by dimension — to guide therapeutic support and daily adaptations.
📋 At a glance
Format: Downloadable PDF · Cost: Free · Access: Immediate, no registration · Category: Orality · Target: All ages with sensory eating difficulties · Users: Speech therapists, occupational therapists, families, pediatricians, dietitians
1.1 Example of a completed visual profile
🌡️ Example of a sensory food profile (7-year-old child)
1.2 The structure of the sheet: its 6 sections
📝 General information
Age, eating context, history (introduction of solids, significant events, evolution)
🌡️ Assessment by dimension
Texture, taste, smell, temperature, visual aspect, sound, proprioception — assessment and concrete examples
📋 Food inventory
Accepted and rejected foods, with the identified sensory reasons for each category
🎯 Therapeutic goals
Priority target foods and sensory dimensions to work on first
📅 Monitoring over time
Columns for dated re-evaluation to measure progress over time
💬 Notes and comments
Qualitative observations, particular contexts, relevant medical information
Sensory food profile — Free DYNSEO
Structured assessment tool to map food sensitivities and guide oral disorders. Instantly downloadable — shareable with the entire multidisciplinary team. No registration required.
Download for free →2. Who is the sensory food profile aimed at?
Speech therapists
Central tool for assessing oral disorders — structures the assessment, shares data with the team, tracks progress over time.
Occupational therapists
Crosses the food profile with the overall sensory assessment. Guides sensory integration strategies related to eating.
Families
Tool for understanding and communication — objectifies real eating difficulties and facilitates dialogue with professionals.
Dietitians / pediatricians
Precise sensory data to guide dietary adaptations and differentiate sensory refusals from refusals of other origins.
3. How to use the profile: practical guide
3.1 Administration in 4 stages
Choose the right moment
Calm discussion with the family — not during a meal, not immediately after a food crisis. A serene moment ensures more precise and reliable responses.
Fill out with the family, complete with clinical observations
The family sees daily meals. The professional completes with their clinical observations. The combination of the two sources provides a more complete and reliable profile.
Be precise about examples of concrete foods
"Refuses yogurts but accepts fresh cheeses" is much more useful than "sensitive to soft textures." Precision allows for the construction of a realistic food hierarchy based on the child's daily life.
Distinguish hypersensitivity and hyposensitivity
This distinction is crucial for therapeutic strategies. A child who is hypersensitive to texture needs a reduction in stimulation; a child who is hyposensitive seeks foods with high sensory intensity.
3.2 In speech therapy session
🎯 In the initial assessment: establish the baseline
From the first session, the profile establishes a precise picture of food sensitivities. This baseline will be the reference for measuring progress in subsequent re-evaluations.
🎯 During monitoring: build the food hierarchy
The profile guides the construction of the food hierarchy — from the most accepted foods to the most difficult ones. The progression always starts from the sensory comfort zone identified in the profile.
🎯 In re-evaluation: measure progress
Every 2-3 months, a new re-evaluation column is completed. The comparison makes progress visible — even subtle — and keeps the motivation of the family and child high in a process that is often long.
Practical tip: Take a photo of the completed profile and share it via email with all the professionals involved. A common document avoids redundant assessments and ensures consistency among all participants.
3.3 At home
- Use the profile to prepare meals anticipating problematic sensory dimensions
- Share the profile with the school cafeteria to obtain simple adaptations
- Communicate to grandparents and caregivers — replaces a long verbal explanation
- Update when changes are observed — a recently accepted food deserves to be noted
⚠️ Important: The sensory food profile is an assessment tool, not a treatment. It does not replace intervention by a professional specialized in oral disorders. For severe disorders (weight loss, malnutrition, frequent aspirations), urgent medical consultation is necessary.
3.4 Multidisciplinary communication
👥 Stakeholders to involve
- Speech therapist — responsible for assessment and monitoring
- Occupational therapist — overall sensory integration
- Pediatrician — medical causes to exclude
- Dietitian — nutritional balance
- Psychologist — food anxiety
- School cafeteria — practical adaptations
📋 What the profile brings
- Common language among all participants
- Avoids redundant assessments
- Objectifies difficulties without judgment
- Basis for practical adaptations
- Tracks progress over time
- Strengthens families' trust
« The DYNSEO sensory food profile gave me in one page what I struggled to explain in an hour at the cafeteria: why my son cannot have foods that touch on the plate, why he refuses everything that is hot, and why he needs crunchiness. Since they have the profile, lunches go much better. »
— Mother of an 8-year-old boy with sensory oral disorders4. The DYNSEO Orality ecosystem
🧰 Complementary DYNSEO tools — Orality
Meal diary — Free complementary tool
To complement the profile with daily monitoring, the meal diary allows tracking eating behaviors day by day — acceptances, refusals, contexts, reactions.
Access the meal diary →MON DICO Application
MON DICO allows children with limited communication to express their food preferences — a complement for profiles of children with autism and oral disorders.
COCO Application
COCO boosts the self-confidence of children with oral disorders — a factor that positively influences their relationship with new foods.
Cognitive tests
The DYNSEO cognitive tests objectify functions associated with oral disorders in adults (especially after Stroke).
Map to understand, understand to support
The DYNSEO sensory food profile transforms "it's difficult at the table" into precise and actionable data. Free, immediately usable, shareable with the entire team — download it now.
Download for free →Meal diary
FAQ — Sensory Food Profile
Q1 What is the difference between this article and the guide "Sensory Food Profile to Support Eating Disorders"?
Both articles address the same tool but from different angles. The thematic guide explores the clinical context of sensory eating disorders in depth — populations, mechanisms, strategies for profiling. It is aimed at someone looking to understand oral disorders. This article "presentation and use" focuses on the structure of the tool — its sections, administration phases, and uses by professionals. It is aimed at someone who wants to know exactly what the tool contains before downloading it. Both are complementary.
Q2 Is the profile reliable without specialized training in oral disorders?
The profile is designed to be usable by non-specialists — particularly families and generalist professionals. However, clinical interpretation (distinguishing sensory causes from medical causes, guiding the therapeutic plan) requires specialized expertise. Families use it to observe and structure; generalists to detect and guide; specialists for comprehensive clinical assessment.
Q3 Can the profile be used with adults?
Yes — oral disorders are not limited to children. The profile is relevant for autistic adults with persistent food selectivity, adults with eating disorders after Stroke, and adults with undiagnosed sensory integration disorders in childhood. Some sections (history of solid food introduction) do not apply, but the core of the tool — mapping current sensitivities — remains entirely relevant.
Q4 How to explain the profile to a child without it seeming like a "test"?
For children aged 6-7 years and older, present it as "a survey of tastes" — there are no right or wrong answers. For younger children, the profile is completed solely by observing adults. The goal is to gather objective information, never to put the child through a test.
Q5 How often should the profile be updated?
During active work, every 2-3 months. Outside of active monitoring, an annual reassessment is sufficient for children whose profile evolves naturally. A significant event (change of school, illness, medication) justifies an occasional reassessment. Keeping all dated versions allows for viewing long-term evolution.
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