Baby started refusing liquid medicine around 3-4 months. This helped during that window. We used it a handful of times, then baby gradually got better at taking medicine and we needed it less. Useful to have, not something you use constantly.
First few months — medicine was fine. Baby took it. Around 3-4 months things changed. Baby got more opinionated and started fighting it. That's when we needed something.
"We only used it maybe 1 or 2 times. Baby wasn't taking medicine well and this helped when we needed it. It worked fine. We didn't end up needing it constantly — baby got better at taking medicine on her own after a while. But when we needed it, it did the job."
"Baby took medicine fine early on, then around 3-4 months started getting restless about it. This helped in that window. Used it a few times, worked. Over time baby just got better at it and we used this less and less. Still not super easy to give medicine to baby generally — but this is better than fighting with a syringe. Would I buy again? Yes, but only if baby is actually fussy about it. If they take it fine, you don't need this."
roved so it's actually safe to use as a regular pacifier too. We wash it in the dishwasher after each use. One warning: the medicine comes out pretty fast, so go slow or baby might choke. But once you get the hang of it, it's a game-changer."Baby sucks on it like a regular pacifier and the medicine comes through the nipple. Works with the sucking instinct instead of against it. Around 3-4 months when baby started refusing medicine from a syringe — this was the workaround that helped.
Ask us anything! We've tested this extensively and are happy to share our experience.