Pediatric Tube Feeding and Weaning Support
Transition safely from tube to oral feeding with support from Flourishing Kids’ therapy and nutrition team.
We create healthy kids and happy eaters!
What is Enteral Nutrition and Tube Weaning?
Tube feeding, also called enteral nutrition, delivers liquid nutrition, fluids, and medications directly into a child’s stomach or small intestine through the nose or the abdomen. This tactic is used when oral feeding is not yet safe or effective.
Tube weaning helps gradually transition toward oral feeding. Our feeding therapist (SLP) and pediatric dietitian (RD) work closely with your child to build hunger cues, improve oral motor skills, increase comfort around food, and support nutritional needs, all while making the process as positive and supportive as possible.
Let’s Get to the Root of your child’s challenges
How It Works
Wondering how our program works? Flourishing Kids reduces reliance on tube feeding in infants, toddlers and preschoolers through four distinct stages.
Evaluation
Our comprehensive joint evaluation begins with your child's story. We review medical history, growth, feeding skills, and enteral nutrition history while learning about your family's goals and concerns. Together, we identify the safest next steps and create a personalized plan to support your child's transition toward oral feeding.
Feeding Therapy
For 12 weeks, our feeding therapist supports your child's transition from tube to oral feeding through individualized, child-led sessions that build feeding skills, increase confidence, and create positive experiences around eating.
Nutrition Support
As tube weaning progresses, your child’s nutritional needs evolve. Our dietitian works in tandem with our SLP to gradually decrease reliance on a pediatric feeding tube. We craft nutrition plans around hunger, intake, and more to keep your child growing safely.
At-Home Implementation
Weaning works best when the strategies stick at home. Our team provides you with at-home tactics to try — and we conduct one home visit (within a 30-minute radius of our office) to help you troubleshoot. Between sessions, our team is available for ongoing support via the Telegram app.
Personal Coaching on Feeding, Lactation, and Nutrition
Why In-Person Support Matters
Transitioning from enteral nutrition to oral intake is risky if you don’t know when to pause, adjust, or request additional support. The Flourishing Kids team keeps a close eye on your child’s progress to protect their comfort and safety — and ensure you are never left in the dark.
Safe Swallowing ·Starting Solids ·Tube Weaning ·Picky Eating
Frequently Asked Questions
Navigating tube feeding and tube weaning can feel overwhelming, and it's natural to have questions along the way. Whether you're wondering if your child is ready to begin weaning, what to expect during the process, or how therapy can help, we've answered some of the most common questions families ask about pediatric tube feeding and tube weaning.
If you don't see your question below, we're happy to help—just reach out to our team.
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Tube feeding in infants, toddlers, and preschoolers is often recommended when a child is unable to consume enough nutrition orally to support safe growth and development. Children with a feeding tube may have difficulty swallowing safely, coordinating feeding, or maintaining the endurance needed for oral feeding.
Common conditions requiring a pediatric feeding tube include:
Prematurity
Neurological/Neuromuscular Conditions
Gastrointestinal (GI) Disorders
Congenital Malformations
Respiratory Issues
Feeding Aversion
Critical Illness/Surgery
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Tube feedings may be gradually decreased if your child displays the following signs?
Safe swallowing of purees and solids (thin liquids not necessary to start)
Ability to take at least 1 Tbsp (15 ml) of a pureed food by mouth in one sitting
Stable growth, often above the 10th percentile for weight and length or BMI
Interest in food and mealtime, with willingness to bring items to the mouth
Medically stable, with enough tolerance for feeds
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“Medically stable” means your child’s health is steady and well-managed with their medical team’s guidance. This state empowers our SLP and dietitian to transition your child away from enteral nutrition safely.
If your child has had recent hospitalizations, major medication changes, or ongoing breathing or growth concerns, our team would coordinate with their providers before taking action. Otherwise, we may recommend continuing to use a pediatric feeding tube until things are more stable.
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Short-term weight loss is normal as your child transitions to oral intake and learns to feel hunger. An acceptable weight loss would include:
10% loss with BMI 10-25th
15% loss with BMI 25-70th
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Flourishing Kids’ tube-weaning program is exclusively private-pay. However, depending on your plan, HSA/FSA funds may be eligible for use.