justhat
<font color=teal>DC DISer<br><font color=red>pick
- Joined
- Oct 22, 2002
- Messages
- 7,449
Pacifier Use:
For reasons that as yet are unknown, research has conclusively shown that using a pacifier at sleep time (following a breast feeding or bottle feeding session) can significantly reduce the risk of SIDS during the first year of life. The evidence in this regard has been mounting for some time, and it is now recommended as an option for parents. The following guidelines are offered to ensure the best outcome:
1. Breastfed infants should not be offered a pacifier until one month of age to ensure that breastfeeding is firmly established.
2. Pacifiers should not be forced on babies that reject them.
3. Pacifiers do not need to be reinserted once the baby falls asleep.
4. Pacifiers should not be coated in any sweet solution.
5. Do not use a string or other device to attach pacifiers around your baby’s neck or to clothing.
Experts feel that quite possibly the stimulation of the sucking reflex by the pacifier keeps babies from falling into a deep sleep and heightens their arousal response throughout the night.
To address concerns in regard to breastfeeding and long-term dental problems, the AAP carefully evaluated existing evidence on these issues. The evidence that it can help reduce the risk of SIDS far outweighed evidence that it might interfere with successful breastfeeding or cause long-term dental complications. In fact, according to the American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry, non-nutritive sucking habits are considered normal and, in general, sucking habits in children to the age of five are unlikely to cause any long term problems.
ETA: I believe the AAP says 6 months for the SIDS prevention.
ETA again: I was wrong, it is 12 months.
"Whatever the reason for the apparent protective effect, the AAP is recommending offering infants a pacifier at bedtime and naptime for the first year of life. The pacifier doesn't need to be reinserted if it falls out during sleep. And don't coat the pacifier with any sweet substances to entice the baby to take it. Breast-fed infants should not be given a pacifier until breast-feeding is well-established, usually at one month, the academy said."
http://www.mainegeneral.org/19003.cfm
For reasons that as yet are unknown, research has conclusively shown that using a pacifier at sleep time (following a breast feeding or bottle feeding session) can significantly reduce the risk of SIDS during the first year of life. The evidence in this regard has been mounting for some time, and it is now recommended as an option for parents. The following guidelines are offered to ensure the best outcome:
1. Breastfed infants should not be offered a pacifier until one month of age to ensure that breastfeeding is firmly established.
2. Pacifiers should not be forced on babies that reject them.
3. Pacifiers do not need to be reinserted once the baby falls asleep.
4. Pacifiers should not be coated in any sweet solution.
5. Do not use a string or other device to attach pacifiers around your baby’s neck or to clothing.
Experts feel that quite possibly the stimulation of the sucking reflex by the pacifier keeps babies from falling into a deep sleep and heightens their arousal response throughout the night.
To address concerns in regard to breastfeeding and long-term dental problems, the AAP carefully evaluated existing evidence on these issues. The evidence that it can help reduce the risk of SIDS far outweighed evidence that it might interfere with successful breastfeeding or cause long-term dental complications. In fact, according to the American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry, non-nutritive sucking habits are considered normal and, in general, sucking habits in children to the age of five are unlikely to cause any long term problems.
ETA: I believe the AAP says 6 months for the SIDS prevention.
ETA again: I was wrong, it is 12 months.
"Whatever the reason for the apparent protective effect, the AAP is recommending offering infants a pacifier at bedtime and naptime for the first year of life. The pacifier doesn't need to be reinserted if it falls out during sleep. And don't coat the pacifier with any sweet substances to entice the baby to take it. Breast-fed infants should not be given a pacifier until breast-feeding is well-established, usually at one month, the academy said."
http://www.mainegeneral.org/19003.cfm
), he was totally fine with a bottle of pumped milk *if* in fact they needed it.
(FWIW, my daughter would never sleep in her crib until we added the bumper -- she would sleep with the top of her head jammed up against it, so I think it just made her more comfortable.)
She's an odd one, though. When I tried giving her a pacifier after reading the whole SIDS risk thing she refused it, but when she started crawling and found one in her toy box it became a favorite toy, though not used as intended. She's 1 now and still doesn't seem to understand how it is supposed to work - she holds the nipple and chews the shield & handle, and no matter how many times I turn it around for her, she goes right back to what she wants to do with it. 

Babies are born with an incredible urge to suck. I loved pacifiers - for the first few months, they could have them whenever, and then they could only have them for sleeping, and traumatic situations, like getting shots. My babies LOVED nap and bedtime! They napped 4 - 5 hours a day, slept all night. Giving them up was not hard - we mailed them to Mickey Mouse, and he sent them a present. They are also a way to prevent SIDS. As for dental issues, thanks to a family history of small jaws and crossbites, most of them would need braces anyway (plus, since they were limited, none of them ended up with an overbite).