Why use a pacifier?
The amount of extra sucking babies do when they are not
feeding varies. This extra sucking is a beneficial
self-comforting behavior. Some babies suck on their thumb or
fingers almost constantly. If you have a baby like this, you
may want to try to interest him in a pacifier.
To be accepted as a substitute for the thumb, the pacifier
has to be introduced during the baby's first 2 months. The
orthodontic type of pacifier allegedly is best because it
prevents tongue-thrusting during sucking, but the regular
type also is fine. You will probably need to try different
pacifiers to find the shape your baby prefers.
The biggest advantage of a pacifier is that if you can get
your child to use one, he won't suck his thumb.
Thumbsucking can cause a severe overbite if it continues
after your child's permanent teeth come in. A pacifier
exerts less pressure on the teeth and causes much less
overbite than the thumb. Also, you can control your child's
use of a pacifier as he grows older. In contrast, it is
much more difficult to stop your child from sucking his
thumb because the thumb belongs to him.
When should I give my baby the pacifier?
Start the pacifier by 1 to 2 months of age if your baby
shows a tendency to become a thumbsucker. Otherwise one is
probably not needed. Some babies can soothe themselves
without sucking. The peak age for thumbsucking or using a
pacifier in infants is 2 to 4 months. In the following
months, the urge to suck normally decreases. A good age to
make the pacifier less available is when your child starts
to crawl. A pacifier can interfere with normal babbling and
speech development. This is especially important after 12
months of age, when speech should increase dramatically.
It's hard for a child to talk with a pacifier in his mouth.
To make sure your child doesn't become overly attached to a
pacifier (for example, walk around with it in his mouth all
the time), consider the following recommendations:
- During your child's first 6 months, give him the pacifier
whenever he wants to suck but isn't happy. Be careful
not to offer it every time he cries. Crying has a number
of causes besides hunger and a need to suck.
- When your baby is unhappy, first use cuddling to provide
comfort instead of offering the pacifier. Some infants
like massage. Try not to overuse the pacifier while you
are comforting your baby.
- After 6 months of age (or when your baby starts
crawling), offer the pacifier less often. Keep it out of
sight when not in use.
- If you allow your child to use a pacifier all the time,
his interest in it will increase rather than decrease.
If your child seems to want a security object while he is
awake, offer something besides the pacifier, such as a
stuffed animal.
- If your baby uses a pacifier, don't forget to take it
with you when you travel. Keeping a spare pacifier in
the car can save you some trouble. In air travel,
sucking a pacifier or swallowing fluids during descent
can prevent ear pain.
- Do not use the pacifier to help your child fall asleep.
Never use a pacifier as a sleep transition object (except
in cases for calming a colicky newborn). It will become
a bad habit that requires you to locate the pacifier
following normal awakenings at night. When your baby
starts to fall asleep, the pacifier will start to fall
out and your child will awaken and try to grasp it with
his mouth. Also following normal awakenings at night,
infants can't find, pickup and re-insert a pacifier until
10 to 12 months old. Help your child learn to put
himself to sleep. Keep the pacifier out of the crib.
What safety precautions should be taken?
Observe the following precautions for using a pacifier:
- Use a one-piece commercial pacifier. Don't try to make
one yourself by taping a nipple to a plastic bottle cap.
A homemade pacifier can be pulled apart, get caught in
your baby's throat, and cause choking.
- Don't put the pacifier on a string around your baby's
neck. The string could strangle your baby. The
"catch-it-clips" that attach the pacifier to your child's
clothing on a short ribbon are practical and safe.
- Don't use a pacifier with a liquid center. (Some have
been found to be contaminated with germs.)
- Don't coat the pacifier with sweets, which may cause
dental cavities if your child's teeth are coming in.
Honey may cause a serious disease called botulism in
children less than 1 year old.
- Rinse off the pacifier each time your baby finishes using
it or if it drops to the floor.
- Buy a new pacifier if the old one becomes damaged.
How can I get my child to stop using a pacifier?
If pacifier use has been restricted to times you are holding
your child, he will usually lose interest in it by 9 to 12
months of age. If he has been allowed to use it frequently
and is very interested in it, your child will usually agree
to give it up completely by the age of 3 or 4 years. Pick a
time to give it up when your child is not coping with new
stresses or fears. Sometimes giving up the pacifier on a
birthday, holiday, or other special occasion is easier for
your child.
Make the transition as pleasant as possible. You may need
to offer incentives. If your child is strongly attached to
a pacifier, offer to replace the last nighttime pacifier
with a new stuffed animal or encourage him to trade it for
something else he wants. Never use punishment or
humiliation to force your child to give up the pacifier.
Give your child the choice of throwing the pacifier away or
leaving it out to be picked up (for example, by Santa Claus
or the "pacifier fairy"). Putting the pacifier away
somewhere in the house is usually not a good idea, because
your child will be more likely to ask for it during times of
stress. At such times, comfort your child with cuddling
instead. Help your child talk about missing the pacifier.
Praise your child for this sign of growing up.
Written by B.D. Schmitt, M.D., author of "Your Child's Health," Bantam Books.
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to
change as new health information becomes available. The
information is intended to inform and educate and is not a
replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or
treatment by a healthcare professional.
Copyright © 2005 McKesson Corporation and/or one of its subsidiaries. All Rights Reserved.