Wednesday, October 08, 2008

Is a 3-yr-old who eats paper normal?

She keeps eating paper. She's fine developmentally, she knows it's not food. Do you think she may have pica or is it just a preschooler thing?

Anytime paper and psychology intersect, you know I'm going to get excited!

According to the DSM-IV-TR, the diagnostic manual of psychiatry and clinical psychology, pica (diagnosis #307.52), is the "consumption of nonfood items, including dirt, clay, starch, ice, cloth, and so forth. Transient pica is very common in normal children, and may also be seen in about one-quarter of severely retarded patients. Pica may be seen in up to a third or more of pregnant women; it may also be endemic in certain culturally isolated groups, but is for the most part rare in otherwise normal adults."

Note especially this part: Transient pica is very common in normal children. Also, for someone to actually have a case of pica, the following DSM criteria need to be met:
  • Persistent eating of non-nutritive substances for a period of at least 1 month.
  • The eating of non-nutritive substances is inappropriate to the developmental level.
  • The eating behavior is not part of a culturally sanctioned practice.
  • If the eating behavior occurs exclusively during the course of another mental disorder (e.g., Mental Retardation, Pervasive Developmental Disorder, Schizophrenia), it is sufficiently severe to warrant independent clinical attention.
A developmentally normal three year old who eats paper occasionally is totally normal, i.e. it is most definitely a pre-schooler thing.

I think this question about pica is a good question because it relates to many things that are fun to think about: the culture of food, the definition of abnormal behavior in light of cultural expectations for behavior, and also a relatively new field in behavioral studies called zoopharmacognosy [Zoh-o-farm-uh-cog-nose-ee is how I say it].

Michael Huffman, a primatologist I would love to meet some day, perhaps at the Kyoto University of Japan in January when I'm in Kyoto, is one of the founders of the field. Zoopharmacognosy is basically the study of herbal medicinal use among animals. Primatologists like Huffman have discovered that monkeys and apes ingest substances that are not food because they have beneficial properties. These include charcoal, mud, the bitter pith of trees and various other things that are not normally eaten, including in the case of woolly spider monkeys and lemurs — plants that affect fertility.

Here's a brief synopsis of some non-foods that animals eat for health reasons:
  • Aspilia plant leaves - chimpanzees - rids intestinal parasites
  • Vernonia bush pith - chimpanzees - helps upset stomach
  • fruit from the 'Monkey Ear' plant - woolly spider monkey - increased fertility
  • leaves of Apulia leiocarpa & Platypodium elegans - woolly spider monkey - decreased fertility
  • Boraginaceae trees - elephants - induce labor
  • clay - spider monkeys - diarrhea treatment
  • charcoal - colobus monkeys - counteract toxins in a highly nutritious plant
Note that some of these (leaves, fruit, etc) may seem like food, but they are not ingested frequently and they are apparently only sought out when the individual is sick.

The condition pica, even as defined by the DSM, may not be inherently abnormal or 'crazy' after all. Perhaps the child who eats paper senses a dietary deficiency in fiber. And maybe the pregnant woman who craves dirt or clay instinctively wants to cleanse toxins from her body to keep the fetus healthy. However, there is no doubt in my mind that some forms of pica — such as a French man who ingested $650 worth of coins — are clearly abnormal and dangerous to one's health. Pica is just one example of a healthy behavior that when taken to the extreme, is anything but.

For further reading:
Really Wild Remedies
Geophagy: Soil Consumption
By Watching What Animals Eat, Experts May Find New Medicines for People
Bite the Bullet: A man who ate bullets

8 comments:

The Ebon Swan said...

You know, I've always wondered if some mild cases of pica were just the body trying to fix or prevent something that instinct was telling them needed attention. I remember being grilled constantly by healthcare workers while pregnant as to whether or not I wanted to eat laundry soap, or paint chips, or drywall scraps. I didn't, but it got me to thinking *why* an otherwise healthy person would have those cravings. Sort of like a dog who eats grass to settle his stomach, I suppose.

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SquirrelGurl said...

There was a kid in my kindergarten class that ate paste ALL THE TIME, huges globs of it. I can remember us whining to the teacher, "Alvin's eating the paste again Ms. Massey!"

He eventually stopped, guess it must have been a phase or maybe an attempt to gross out the girls in class...

Fuzzy Izmit said...

Man, I cant tell you how much I love reading your blog! Intellegent, insightful, and a fun read! Kudos and a great blog!

Field Notes said...

Thank you!

I can't tell you how challenging it is to keep the quality content high =D

Kim Caro said...

i enjoyed paste as a child during art... now adays i stick to food.

Sweet 'n Sassy Baby said...

You have a very interesting and informative blog!

RunzwithScissors said...

I wish I had a good animal story, but mine eat the normal stuff. Except for my dog, Pepper, who, like a puppy, ate everything. But when she ate the chile tepin ristra, well, my ex took her to the vet because she had "bloody stools". The "blood was pieces of chile husk!

Anyway, there was a really good Nova(?) special on geophagy 5-6 years ago. From the West African markets of all the clays, to English individuals licking potato eyes, quite wide-ranging and interesting.

Does anyone actually have the answer yet?