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Enteral Feeding Pump Basics for Supply Coordinators

Aadmin
May 30, 2026
Updated Jun 12, 2026
2min read
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You don’t need to be a dietitian to stock the nutrition floor correctly — you need to know the categories and where they go wrong. An enteral feeding pump delivers formula at a controlled rate through a feeding tube, and the whole job of stocking it well comes down to a few checks.

Clinicians care about rate accuracy, occlusion and air-in-line alarms, and battery life for patients who need to move around. From your side, the thing that bites coordinators is that pumps and sets are not interchangeable — each pump usually requires its own dedicated, single-patient-use sets.

That’s the reorder trap: stock the wrong sets for the pumps on the floor and you’ve got a drawer full of useless tubing. Standardize on as few pump platforms as is clinically reasonable, and every platform you cut is a set you no longer have to keep in stock.

The one safety item worth memorizing is ENFit — connectors designed so enteral formula physically cannot be connected to an IV line. Stock ENFit-compliant sets and you’ve closed the most dangerous error in the whole category.

For the full breakdown, read our enteral feeding & clinical nutrition guide — it goes deeper than we can here.

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2 min read

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May 30, 2026

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