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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2010 Feb 25.
Published in final edited form as: Neonatal Netw. 2005 May–Jun;24(3):7–16. doi: 10.1891/0730-0832.24.3.7

TABLE 2.

Examples of EFS Items within Each Section

Oral Feeding Readiness
Able to hold body in a flexed position with arms/hands toward midline Yes No
Demonstrates energy for feeding—maintains muscle tone and body flexion through assessment period Yes No
Oral Feeding Skill
Ability to Remain Engaged in Feeding
Predominant muscle tone (energy infant demonstrates for feeding) Maintains flexed
body position
with arms toward
midline
Inconsistent tone,
variable muscle
tone
Some tone
consistently felt,
but somewhat
hypotonic
Little or no tone
felt; flaccid, limp
most of the time
Ability to Organize Oral-Motor Functioning
Opens mouth promptly when lips are stroked at feeding onsets All Most Some None
Once feeding is under way, maintains a smooth, rhythmic pattern of sucking
Ability to Coordinate Swallowing and Breathing
Able to engage in long sucking bursts (7–10 sucks) without behavioral stress signs or an adverse or negative cardiorespiratory response
Ability to Maintain Physiologic Stability
In the first 30 seconds after each feeding onset, oxygen saturation is stable, and behavioral stress cues absent
Stops to breathe before behavioral stress cues appear
Clear breath sounds—no grunting breath sounds (prolonging the exhale, partially closing glottis on exhale)
Oral Feeding Recovery (During the First Five Minutes Postfeeding)
Predominant state Quiet Alert Drowsy Sleep Fuss/Cry
Range of oxygen saturation (%):