4.0 Article

Supporting Oral Feeding in Fragile Infants An Evidence-Based Method for Quality Bottle-Feedings of Preterm, Ill, and Fragile Infants

Journal

JOURNAL OF PERINATAL & NEONATAL NURSING
Volume 25, Issue 4, Pages 349-357

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/JPN.0b013e318234ac7a

Keywords

algorithm; behavior; bottle; feeding; guide; manual; NICU; nursing care; preterm infant; quality

Funding

  1. NIH [5 T32 DK 07658-17]
  2. Children's Hospital of Philadelphia
  3. College of New Jersey

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Successful oral feeding of preterm and other ill and fragile infants is an interactive process that requires (1) sensitive, ongoing assessment of an infant's physiology and behavior, (2) knowledgeable decisions that support immediate and long-term enjoyment of food, and (3) competent skill in feeding. Caregivers can support feeding success by using the infant's biological and behavioral channels of communication to inform their feeding decisions and actions. The Supporting Oral Feeding in Fragile Infants (SOFFI) Method is described here with text, algorithms, and reference guides. Two of the algorithms and the reference guides are published separately as Philbin, Ross. SOFFI Reference Guides: Text, Algorithms, and Appendices (in review). The information in all of these materials is drawn from sound research findings and, rarely, when such findings are not available, from expert, commonly accepted clinical practice. If the quality of a feeding takes priority over the quantity ingested, feeding skill develops pleasurably and at the infant's own pace. Once physiologic organization and behavioral skills are established, an affinity for feeding and the ingestion of sufficient quantity occur naturally, often rapidly, and at approximately the same postmenstrual age as volume-focused feedings. Nurses, therapists, and parents alike can use the SOFFI Method to increase the likelihood of feeding success in the population of infants at risk for feeding problems that emerge in infancy and extend into the preschool years.

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