Interview with Dr. Reinhold Kerbl, head of the paediatric department of the LKH Hochsteiermark regional hospital in Leoben, Austria
Kerbl: Bottle feeding and pacifiers are often linked to the term nipple confusion; and therefore, the advice associated with this concept is often to avoid using them altogether. However, there is no scientific evidence suggesting that pacifiers have a negative impact on how often or how long a baby breastfeeds. Personally, I see pacifiers as a good way to help soothe babies and satisfy their suckling instinct.
Kerbl: This recommendation is based on the assumption that pacifiers have a negative impact on breastfeeding. However, there are now good studies that show this assumption to be incorrect. Indeed, based on these findings, the Baby Friendly Hospital Initiative has changed its advice from a complete ban to the provision of adequate advice (‘counseling instead of prohibiting’).1
Kerbl: Pacifiers for premature babies are a medical product and should be seen in the same way as medication, as they offer a number of benefits for premature babies. They can help alleviate pain during medical procedures and other interventions; they can help sooth premature babies in often difficult surroundings (e.g. a neonatal intensive care unit); and they can help babies gain weight more quickly1 and reduce the time spent in the intensive care unit (even in babies that are still undergoing tests).
Kerbl: In addition to pediatricians, dentists frequently encounter issues around pacifiers. This is because long-term or incorrect use of a pacifier can cause teeth and jaws to become misaligned, resulting in a crossbite, overjet or similar. It is, therefore, vital that pacifiers are only used to help children settle and that children are weaned off a pacifier by their third birthday at the latest.
1Kerbl R. (2019) Counseling instead of prohibiting: The new Baby Friendly Hospital Initiative. Monatsschr Kinderheilkd 167:89
First publication: Paediatr. Paedolog. 2019;54:238–239; www.springermedizin.at/saugverwirrung-gibt-es-denn-sowas/17286296 © Springer-Verlag GmbH Austria, part of Springer Nature 2019.