Abstract

BackgroundVery preterm infants frequently experience difficulties in achieving feeding independency. The availability of feeding assessment instruments has been recommended to evaluate an infant's readiness for oral feeding and enable preterm infants' caregivers to document each infant's feeding readiness and advancements. AimsTo investigate the implementation of the Infant Driven Scale in neonatal intensive care units and to identify a cut off value associated with delayed feeding independency. Study designProspective, observational, single-centre study. SubjectsA total of 47 infants born at a gestational age≤32weeks, consecutively admitted to a tertiary neonatal unit between July 2015 and March 2016. Outcomes measuresThe infant's feeding readiness and the postmenstrual age at achievement of feeding independency. ResultsMean postmenstrual age at feeding independency was 35.6±1.34weeks. A linear regression analysis showed that a score≤8 at 32weeks of postmenstrual age was associated with a delay of 1.8weeks in achieving feeding independency. ConclusionThe Infant Driven Scale appears to be a useful additional instrument for the assessment of preterm infants' oral feeding readiness and the early identification of the infants at risk for delayed feeding independency.

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