4.0 Article

Neonatal Feeding Behavior as a Complex Dynamical System

Journal

SEMINARS IN SPEECH AND LANGUAGE
Volume 38, Issue 2, Pages 77-86

Publisher

THIEME MEDICAL PUBL INC
DOI: 10.1055/s-0037-1599105

Keywords

Dynamical systems; sucking; synergy; emergence

Funding

  1. Boston Children's Hospital
  2. Wyss Institute

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The requirements of evidence-based practice in 2017 are motivating new theoretical foundations and methodological tools for characterizing neonatal feeding behavior. Toward that end, this article offers a complex dynamical systems perspective. A set of critical concepts from this perspective frames challenges faced by speech-language pathologists and allied professionals: when to initiate oral feeds, how to determine the robustness of neonatal breathing during feeding and appropriate levels of respiratory support, what instrumental assessments of swallow function to use with preterm neonates, and whether or not to introduce thickened liquids. In the near future, we can expect vast amounts of new data to guide evidence-based practice. But unless practitioners are able to frame these issues in a systems context larger than the individual child, the availability of big data will not be effectively translated to clinical practice.

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