ARFID Resources
Access ARFID scientific publications and current clinical research studies. Find evidence-based research to support your ARFID journey and connect with published studies and ongoing trials that may help advance treatment and understanding of Avoidant Restrictive Food Intake Disorder.
About these resources: PubMed and ClinicalTrials.gov host scientific papers and study records. They're great for finding evidence, but they can be dense and full of technical jargon—that's normal. Please treat what you read as educational, not medical advice. Bring any questions to your healthcare provider so you can discuss what it means for your situation.
Third-party content notice: These links take you to external websites. BeatARFID, LLC does not review, verify, screen, endorse, or supervise the information on those sites and is not affiliated with the authors, journals, study sponsors, or site operators. We don't control updates to those pages and aren't responsible for errors, omissions, or how the information is interpreted.
Growth Charts
Access official CDC growth charts to track and monitor growth patterns in children and adolescents.
CDC Growth Charts
The CDC Growth Charts are the official growth charts used by healthcare providers to track growth in children and adolescents in the United States. These charts help assess whether a child's growth is progressing normally and can be particularly useful for families managing ARFID to monitor nutritional recovery and growth patterns.
Opens in new window
Scientific Publications
Search published ARFID research articles and studies through the official NIH database.
National Institute of Health / PubMed
PubMed is a free website where you can search medical research articles. It's operated by the NIH's National Library of Medicine.
Opens in new window
Clinical Research
Find current ARFID research studies and clinical trials through the official U.S. government database.
ClinicalTrials.gov
ClinicalTrials.gov is a website and online database of clinical research studies and information about their results. The purpose of ClinicalTrials.gov is to provide information about clinical research studies to the public, researchers, and health care professionals. You can find information regarding ARFID clinical research studies here.
Opens in new window