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Electronic pacifier helps preemies learn to suck

By | May 25, 2012, 4:07 PM PDT

Babies who are born prematurely often don’t have the ability to make the sucking motions needed to get milk from mom or bottles.

So researchers designed an electronic pacifier to help them make the trip home faster.
IEEE Spectrum reports.

The pacifier senses when the baby is sucking correctly, and as a reward, plays a musical lullaby to encourage the baby to continue.

They call it the Pacifier Activated Lullaby (pictured). The details:

  • ‘Proprietary piezo sensing technology’ detects the baby’s sucking motion.
  • Feedback algorithms determine when the breathe-suck-swallow reflex is correct, and a signal is sent through a wire to a speaker that plays music.

Some babies start feeding after using the device for 15 minutes, according to the inventor, music professor Jayne Standley at Florida State University.

She has also found that infants exposed to musical reinforcement increase their sucking rates up to 2.5 times. And if preterm infants reduce their stay in the neonatal intensive care units by 5 days, that’s about $10,000 saved per infant.

Florida-based Powers Device Technologies bought the rights to the device, and the company announced this week that it had begun selling PAL to hospital neo-natal units. It’s been approved by US Food and Drug Administration, and the company plans to make it available to parents as well.

[Via IEEE Spectrum]

Image: Office of Research, Florida State University

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Janet Fang

About Janet Fang

Janet Fang is a contributing editor for SmartPlanet.

Janet Fang

Janet Fang
Contributing Editor

Janet Fang has written for Nature, Discover and the Point Reyes Light. She is currently a lab technician at Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory. She holds degrees from the University of California, Berkeley and Columbia University. She is based in New York.

Follow her on Twitter.

Janet Fang

Janet Fang

Janet does not have financial holdings that would influence how or what she covers.

She writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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really sweet
Good to know medical science and music are helping some of the weakest people
Posted by wfang173
31st May 2012
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