Neonatal Eating Assessment Tool - Mixed Breastfeeding and Bottle-feeding: Reference values and factors associated with problematic feeding symptoms in healthy, full-term infants
In this study, we reported reference values for the NeoEAT – Mixed Breastfeeding and Bottle-feeding based on data from 409 infants less than 7 months old. Reference values are provided for infants 0 -2, 2 – 4, 4 – 6, and 6 – 7 months old. Reference values can be used to identify whether an infant’s feeding falls outside of the range of typical for their age in order to support early interventions and/or referral to feeding specialists. In this study, we also found that within healthy, full-term infants, those with more gastrointestinal symptoms had higher NeoEAT – Mixed Feeding scores. In infants with concurrent gastrointestinal symptoms and feeding difficulties, management of gastrointestinal distress may be critical to improvement in overall feeding.
Authors: Britt Pados, Jamarii Johnson, & Madeline Nelson
Publication Information: Journal of the American Association of Nurse Practitioners. 2021; 33(11): 938-946. doi: 10.1097/JXX.0000000000000476
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Neonatal Eating Assessment Tool - Mixed Breastfeeding and Bottle-feeding (NeoEAT - Mixed Feeding): Factor analysis and psychometric properties
In this study, we present the factor analysis results and psychometric properties of the NeoEAT – Mixed Breastfeeding and Bottle-feeding for infants less than 7 months old who are feeding by both breast and bottle. Data from 608 infants were used. The NeoEAT – Mixed Breastfeeding and Bottle-feeding is a 68-item parent-report measure with 5 subscales that has evidence of adequate internal consistency reliability and test-retest reliability. The NeoEAT – Mixed Feeding also has evidence of construct validity and known-groups validity. In infants who are both breastfeeding and bottle-feeding, the NeoEAT – Mixed Feeding can be used to identify infants with problematic feeding, guide referral decisions, and evaluate response to interventions.
Authors: Britt Pados, Suzanne Thoyre, & Kara Galer
Publication Information: Maternal Health, Neonatology, & Perinatology. 2019; 5(12): 1-15. doi: 10.1186/s40748-019-0107-7
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