Rooting Reflex
When you stroke baby's cheek or mouth, they turn toward the touch and open mouth (searching for nipple). This is rooting reflex - helps baby find breast/bottle to feed.
Present at birth, strongest first few weeks. Disappears around 3-4 months as voluntary feeding skills develop.
Triggered by touch on cheek, lips, or corner of mouth. Baby will turn and open mouth even when not hungry.
What to Do
- Use rooting reflex to help with feeding - stroke cheek to encourage baby to turn toward breast/bottle
- Touch baby's lips with nipple to trigger wide mouth opening for good latch
- Use this reflex as hunger cue in early weeks - rooting often means hungry
- Be aware some babies root when simply looking for comfort, not always hunger