Ok so first the temps sound great ( it could be cooler on cold side and be fine but your numbers are good). And the basking spot is right on as well.
It appears from the pics that the solar glo is your only UVB source? I have not personally used an all in one bulb like that, so I cant say its bad but it is limiting UVB to when basking only. It is preferred to have the MOST UVB exposure when basking but still have a gradient of drop off to the cool side which would be the *shaded* area. That is best able to be managed with a tube UVB such as a reptisun or arcadia (most reliable and ones I trust). I would like to see someone with experience on the solar glo weigh in as it may be just fine.
As far as the appetite, a drop in eating can be normal with both shedding and relocation stress (relocation stress is something that will happen to a certain degree no matter how good your care is and will get better with time). With that being said you don't want a complete stop in eating, you want to keep offering the food and encouraging some eating. While I wont say meal worms are BAD (every feeder can have upsides and downsides) they do have a higher chitin to meat ratio than other feeders. Variety can also help with eating and I would try to mix in Dubia, Silkworms, and Waxworms as a treat (they are high in fat so not a lot). With the Dubia if you order just to feed you want to go easy on those as well, as if they had a high protein diet they can have high UA levels. If you can however keep a colony of Dubia going to feed from and feed them a low protein diet (around 5% or so) that will help to reduce their UA levels and as a result less UA passed to your dragon and make them even healthier.
Sadly diet is a never ending discussion that I would dare say we will never get perfect, but what we can all agree on is that variety is key. And you also want to start on salads right away, while little ones are notorious for ignoring it, its best to get them started as early as possible eating it for a balanced diet.