Biobehavioral Efficacy of the Semi-Elevated Side-Lying Position

NACompletedINTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment

60

Participants

Timeline

Start Date

March 10, 2022

Primary Completion Date

May 31, 2024

Study Completion Date

May 31, 2024

Conditions
Feeding, BottleInfant, Premature, DiseasesBehavior, Infant
Interventions
OTHER

Arm 1 - Side-lying position followed by Supine position

Infants will be observed for two bottle feedings within a 24-hour period when they reach approximately 30-50% oral feeding. In this arm, infants will be bottle-fed in the side-lying position first followed by the supine position. In the side-lying feeding position, the infant will be placed on the caregiver's lap with one ear and hip facing the ceiling at a 45 to 60 degree angle. In the supine feeding position, the infant will be placed facing the caregiver in a reclining position at a 45 to 60 degree angle. In both feeding positions, the infant's head, neck, and upper body will be supported by the caregiver to maintain a neutral straight alignment with the chin tilted down slightly without the neck being extended or in excessive flexion. The infant will also be loosely swaddled with a single blanket so their legs, shoulders, and elbows are supported in a flexed position but with the lower arms free to move.

OTHER

Arm 2 - Supine position followed by Side-lying position

Infants will be observed for two bottle feedings within a 24-hour period when they reach approximately 30-50% oral feeding. In this arm, infants will be bottle-fed in the supine position first followed by the side-lying position. In the side-lying feeding position, the infant will be placed on the caregiver's lap with one ear and hip facing the ceiling at a 45 to 60 degree angle. In the supine feeding position, the infant will be placed facing the caregiver in a reclining position at a 45 to 60 degree angle. In both feeding positions, the infant's head, neck, and upper body will be supported by the caregiver to maintain a neutral straight alignment with the chin tilted down slightly without the neck being extended or in excessive flexion. The infant will also be loosely swaddled with a single blanket so their legs, shoulders, and elbows are supported in a flexed position but with the lower arms free to move.

Trial Locations (1)

02215

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston

All Listed Sponsors
collaborator

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

OTHER

collaborator

University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

OTHER

lead

Boston College

OTHER

NCT04942106 - Biobehavioral Efficacy of the Semi-Elevated Side-Lying Position | Biotech Hunter | Biotech Hunter