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A Hard Habit to Break
Part Three
Pacify the Pacifier Habit
By April E. Clark
Some call it a "pacee," a "binky, a "ninny" and even a "dummy." No matter its moniker, the pacifier means comfort to babies and peacefulness for parents. And like all creatures of comfort, babies can have a hard time breaking the rubber nipple habit.
"The pacifier has no major health benefits, but it often plays an important role in making a child and a family more comfortable," says Dr. Ross Black, a family physician and clinical professor of family medicine at the Northeastern Ohio Universities College of Medicine. "Clearly some children like to use pacifiers because they need them for comfort. It's more of a social thing."
A recent study by the Department of Pediatrics at the Medical College of Georgia in Augusta confirms this natural tendency for babies to go gaga over pacifiers. According to the study, 75 to 85 percent of American children use pacifiers, most in their first few weeks. Medical College of Georgia researchers also found that the later in life a child is given a pacifier, the more it is used.
"When we first became parents, we said we weren't going to give our boys pacifiers," says Megan Espich, an Indiana mother of a 16-month-old and a 4-year-old. "With Cameron, our first child, it wasn't much of an issue. But with our second son, Nolan, he really needed a pacifier to calm down, pretty much as soon as he was born."
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