Poor swallowing ability in babies is clinically divided into several cases, and each case is treated differently. If the child has functional swallowing weakness, you can first let the child eat things that are easy to swallow, such as eating liquid food, and then train the child’s swallowing ability by letting the child eat smaller fruits, cookies, etc. Through repeated practice, most children will have a significant recovery of swallowing function. This kind of swallowing practice should be started at a young age, not when the child is older. Some children have anatomical abnormalities, such as cleft palate, congenital laryngotracheal cleft or laryngeal softening disease, which may require surgery to solve the problem. Poor swallowing ability in babies is clinically recommended to be evaluated at pediatric and ENT clinics to see what is going on and then treated symptomatically.