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  • 4 Times to Pull the Pacifier Plug

4 Times to Pull the Pacifier Plug

Proper Pacifier Use

Babies have an intense need to suck, and some have more intense needs than others. Babies even suck their thumbs in the womb. Next to holding and feeding, sucking is the most time-tested comforter. Sucking on a pacifier can be very comforting for babies but make sure you are not giving them a pacifier for the wrong reasons. Follow these tips for proper pacifier use:

1. In the Newborn Nurserypacifier-use

Peer through any newborn nursery window and you’re sure to witness contented babies lying quietly in plastic boxes all with pacifiers plugged in with no place to go. Pull the plug on this scene. These babies should be plugged into their mothers.

2. In the Early Weeks of Breastfeeding

When learning how to breastfeed, pacifier use should be avoided. A baby should have only mother’s nipple in his mouth. About the only thing a newborn has to “learn” is how to suck on mother’s nipple the right way to get the most milk.

Related Articles

  • When Pacifiers Are In
  • Pacifier Research
  • Pacifier Habit
  • A baby sucks on a pacifier differently than on mother’s nipples. Some newborns, develop nipple confusion when given a pacifier or bottle nipple when they are learning to suck from mother. Pacifiers have a narrow base, so baby doesn’t have to open his lips wide. This often results in poor latch-on techniques, sore nipples and a difficult start at breastfeeding.
  • Many sensitive babies gag on every pacifier you might try. The texture, taste and smell are rejected hands down. Other babies make the transition from pacifier use to mother’s nipples without any confusion or complaint.
  • Our advice: Avoid pacifier use until your newborn learns to latch on properly and you have a good milk supply. If your own nipples are wearing out, or at least the mom they are attached to is, use your finger (or, better yet, get dad or someone else to give you a break). The skin-to-skin element is still there, and your index finger (or dad’s little finger) can be placed more properly in baby’s mouth to simulate sucking at the breast. Many of our babies have been soothed by the touch of my well-scrubbed pinkie.

3. When Pacifier Overuse is Harming the Teeth

Between two and three years of age, toddlers can cause their upper front teeth to protrude by sucking intensely on a pacifier, especially at night.

4. As Habitual Substitutes for Nurturing

Ideally, pacifier use is for the comfort of babies, not the convenience of parents (but I have yet to meet the ideal parent or the ideal baby and, believe it or not, you probably won’t meet any on this site.) To insert the plug and leave baby in the plastic infant seat every time he cries is unhealthy reliance on an artificial comforter. This baby needs picking up and holding. Always relying on an alternative peacemaker lessens the buildup of baby’s trust in the parents and denies the parents a chance to develop baby-comforting skills. Pacifiers are meant to satisfy intense sucking needs, not to delay or replace nurturing. A person should always be at the other end of a comforting tool. The breast (or the finger) has the built-in advantage of making sure you don’t fall into the habit of just plugging up the source of the cries as a mechanical gesture. When baby cries, if you find yourself, by reflex, reaching for the pacifier instead of reaching for your baby, pull the plug – and lose it.

August 23, 2013 January 8, 2024 Dr. Bill Sears
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AskDrSears.com is intended to help parents become better informed consumers of health care. The information presented in this site gives general advice on parenting and health care. Always consult your doctor for your individual needs.

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