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Cue-Based Feedings

March 10, 2020

What are Cue-Based Feeds?

Feedings offered by mouth based on your baby’s cues (signs) that he/she is ready and interested in bottle feeding. It is infant driven, flexible, safe, and emphasizes quality over quantity. Feeding readiness is determined by your baby’s hunger and stress behavior and how your baby sucks on the nipple. The goal is to lessen and prevent your baby’s stress while PO feeding. Babies need to learn how to coordinate sucking, swallowing, and breathing, which takes a lot of practice and patience. This typically starts around 32-34 weeks gestation. Cue-based feedings follow the developmental progression of oral motor and sensory skills. Nurses and therapists will work with parents to learn their baby’s hunger signs, stress cues, and techniques to properly and safely feed their baby. 

Common Hunger Signs:

  • Bringing their hand(s) to their mouth

  • Sucking on their fingers or pacifier

  • Being alert, crying and fussing

  • Rooting (turning head side-to-side to find the nipple)

  • Having good muscle tone

  • Opening their mouth (“ooh” face)

Common Stress Cues:

  • Crying during the feed

  • Yawning often

  • Gaze aversion (avoiding eye contact)

  • A change in muscle tone (limp and floppy)

  • Splayed fingers or “stop sign” hands

  • Arching or pulling away from the bottle

  • Apnea and/or bradycardia 

  • Breathing too fast or too slow

  • Facial grimacing

  • Gagging/coughing/retching

  • Spitting out the milk excessively

  • Vomiting

  • A change in coordination

  • Falling asleep

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