Waikato Times

Parent germs can be good for baby

- Ariane Beeston Pediatrics essentialb­aby.com.au

You might think the idea of popping your baby’s dummy in your mouth to give it a quick clean is a tad gross (or not if you’re up to child number three), but according to new research, the way you clean your bub’s dummy could actually reduce their risk of allergies.

‘‘We found the children of mothers who sucked on the pacifier had lower IgE levels,’’ said lead author and allergist Dr Eliane Abou-Jaoude.

‘‘IgE is a type of antibody related to allergic responses in the body.

Although there are exceptions, higher IgE levels indicate a higher risk of having allergies and allergic asthma.’’

As part of the study, AbouJaoude and her colleagues interviewe­d 128 new mothers about how they cleaned their baby’s dummy.

Of the 58 per cent who reported using a dummy for their child, 41 per cent cleaned it via sterilisin­g, 72 per cent handwashed it and 12 per cent cleaned it by popping it in their mouth.

‘‘We found that parental pacifiersu­cking was linked to suppressed IgE levels beginning around 10 months, and continued through 18 months,’’ said coauthor Dr Edward Zoratti.

According to the research team, this may result from the transfer of ‘‘health-promoting’’ microbes from the parent’s mouth.

‘‘We know that exposure to certain micro-organisms early in life stimulates developmen­t of the immune system and may protect against allergic diseases later,’’ says Abou-Jaoude. ‘‘Parental pacifier-sucking may be an example of a way parents may transfer healthy microorgan­isms to their young children.

What remains unclear, however, is whether the effect continues into later years.

Additional­ly, it’s important to note that although the study shows an associatio­n between parents who suck on their baby’s dummy and kids with lower IgE levels, it doesn’t necessaril­y mean that doing so causes lower IgE.

But while the findings are interestin­g, Abou-Jaoude says she is not suggesting parents start cleaning their kids’ dummies by popping them in their mouths when they fall on the floor.

‘‘Bad bacteria can be transferre­d by a parent sucking on the pacifier and then giving it to their child, exposing them to other infections.’’

Instead, Abou-Jaoude says the takeaway message is that the microbes babies are exposed to early in infancy can affect their immune system developmen­t.

A Swedish study published in the journal in 2013 found that parents who cleaned their kid’s dummy by sucking it (after the age of six months) were less likely to have asthma and eczema at 18 months than those who used other cleaning methods.

The researcher­s also found that the ‘‘salivary microbiota’’

‘‘Parental pacifier-sucking may be an example of a way parents may transfer healthy micro-organisms to their young children.’’

Eliane Abou-Jaoude

differed between parents who cleaned their dummies by popping them in their mouth and those who did not.

‘‘Parental sucking of their infant’s pacifier may reduce the risk of allergy developmen­t, possibly via immune stimulatio­n by microbes transferre­d to the infant via the parent’s saliva,’’ the authors wrote at the time.

But they also issued a strong caveat: ‘‘more research is needed to establish if parental pacifiersu­cking could be a simple and safe method to reduce allergy developmen­t in infants and young children.’’

Raising Children Network currently advises that babies under six months should use dummies that have been sterilised.

From six months on, as children are more resistant to infections, parents can wash dummies with soap and water.

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