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Articles

Investigation into the flow rate of bottle teats typically used on an Australian neonatal unit

ORCID Icon, , & ORCID Icon
Pages 29-36 | Received 08 Jul 2020, Accepted 05 Apr 2021, Published online: 19 Apr 2021
 

ABSTRACT

Aims and objectives

Premature and medically fragile infants in neonatal intensive care may be establishing oral feeding skills during their admission. Not all infants can achieve breastfeeding and bottle feeding is the recognised alternative. Choosing a bottle with a manageable flow rate can enable a positive feeding experience. The flow rate of teats used on an Australian NICU were tested to determine their actual flow rate and the variation of flow observed.

Design and methods

Flow rate of five different teats were tested by attaching each teat to a breast pump and measuring the output of milk after 1 minute. Range of flow rate and variability in flow rate values of the five teats used were compared.

Results and conclusions

The results identified differing flow rates as well as individual variation of flow rates for all teats used on an Australian NICU.The Sepal Green /small size nipple/slow flow was the fastest flow rate teat (mean 25.34 mL /minute). The Sepal White / ultra-slow flow teat had the slowest flow rate (mean 7.34 mL/minute). Measurement of variability in flow rate identified a moderate - high mean flow rate for the Sepal White ultra -slow flow teats (CoV = 0.2), with a low mean flow rate for Sepal Green slow flow / small nipple (CoV = 0.06). Data confirmed variability of flow rates both within and between teats used.Flow rate and variability are important factors to consider when selecting supportive feeding equipment for preterm infants.

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to thank the NICU team, Monash Children’s Hospital, Mandy Haberman, Fiona Turner and Toby Hartley (Sepal), A. Hollings, Prof. L. Henry.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

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