Sucking Reflex
When something touches roof of baby's mouth, they automatically suck. This is sucking reflex - essential for feeding.
Present at birth (actually develops in womb around 32 weeks). Coordinates with swallowing and breathing for safe feeding.
Babies have both nutritive sucking (for feeding) and non-nutritive sucking (for comfort - pacifier, thumb). Non-nutritive sucking is faster and shallower.
Reflex transitions to voluntary sucking around 2-4 months but continues throughout infancy.
What to Do
- Watch for strong, rhythmic sucking during feeds - shows reflex is working well
- If sucking seems weak: Check with pediatrician and lactation consultant
- Understand difference: nutritive sucking (feeding) vs. non-nutritive (comfort)
- Coordinated suck-swallow-breathe pattern is crucial for safe feeding