Infant bib

Apparel – Garment protectors – Aprons

Reexamination Certificate

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Details

C012S049100

Reexamination Certificate

active

06732375

ABSTRACT:

RELATED APPLICATIONS
This application is a national phase application of PCT/NO01/00032 filed Jan. 30, 2001 and claims the benefit of the Norwegian application No. 20000546 filed Feb.2. 2000.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to an infant bib and/or a bib for small children who use pacifiers, but who are normally unable to put their pacifiers back into their mouths if the pacifiers should fall out.
2. Description of the Related Art
A bib of the kind that the present invention concerns itself with, is the conventional bib, which by and large takes the form of a piece of cloth or plastic for protecting clothes against dribble and food spillage. Such bibs are provided with fastening means, for example in the form of two fastening bands, one at either one of the upper corners of the rectangular bib, which can be tied together or connected in any easily releasable manner.
Infants wear bibs when they eat, but since some infants and otherwise very small children often throw up food at night-time, the use of a bib has also been normal after the child has been put to bed to sleep.
In order to support a pacifier in its position of use in an infant's mouth, so that it does not fall out so easily, one can try to crumple and shape the bib so that it might have a certain supporting effect to begin with, but experience tells that each time the child turns its head, the bib is brought out of its supporting position, which is thereby neutralised, whereby the bib can no longer prevent the pacifier from falling out.
A child who loses its pacifier, will usually wake up and make some sounds. Thereby the parents may be disturbed repeatedly every night.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,666,665 discloses an additional element in a flat bib for infants. Said element has the form of a roll of liquid-/milk-absorbing cloth and is attached to the upper edge of the bib, at that point were excess milk may presumably run down when the child is fed milk from a feeding bottle.
U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,312,282 and 4,473,907 disclose bibs, to which feeding bottles can be attached and thus be held in position by the bibs, so that the child can suck the teat of the bottle. These combined teats and feeding bottles are best suited for older infants and are not known in combination with pacifier.
Replaceable front pieces on bibs are known in themselves, cf. U.S. Pat. No. 5,490,289, in which hook-and-loop tapes are used as connecting means. Here, attachable outer front pieces with great absorption properties are discussed. An inner front piece, whose upper portion is covered by the attachable/replaceable front piece, has a lower, upward open, non-covered pocket, meant to receive scraps of food and similar which are not caught through absorption by the outer absorbing front piece.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,694,510 and European patent application, publication No. 0 524 325 A1, show bibs equipped in other ways.
None of the bibs explained briefly above have inherent properties to facilitate maintenance of a bent shape with the purpose of supporting and holding a pacifier in place in the mouth for a child who cannot manage to get a pacifier that has fallen out of its mouth, back into its mouth, even if it is in the immediate vicinity of the child's head and hands.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
Thus it has been an object of the invention to provide a bib including soft surfaces of layers of cloth and provided with fastening means, which has properties that make it well suited for being bent and shaped so that it provides efficient and lasting support of a pacifier in a child's mouth, so that the pacifier is inhibited from falling inadvertently out of the child's mouth. By the expression “lasting support” is meant that the bib maintains its pacifier-supporting bent shape in the conditions which can normally be expected for the bib.
According to one aspect of the invention this object is realised in that the bib can be at least partially plastically deformed.
According to the invention the bib is plastically deformable and will thus maintain its bent pacifier-supporting shape.
Based on easily available materials, such as aluminium foil, to provide the bib with the desirable plastic deformability, a multi-layer insert element of plastically deformable foil is wrapped in an external case of soft, flexible, sheet-like cloth or plastic material, for example two layers of cotton fabric which are sewn together along abutting circumferential rim portions to enclose, between themselves, a multi-layer insert element of metal foil.
The bib, which is manufactured in this way, may be equipped with fastening means, for example the two conventional ribbons attached to two of the bib's corners. In addition to the circumferential seams the bib may be provided, if desirable or necessary, with longitudinal and/or transversal seams in order better to keep the layers of the foil insert in place inside the cotton case.
In a manner known in itself, this basic bib may possibly have hook-and-loop tape sewn on for the attachment of an ordinary bib over the front portion of the basic bib.
Due to the plastic deformability of the insert, a bib constructed according to this invention can be bent and shaped so that it obtains an elevated support edge, against which the external part of the pacifier, that is the stop disc that bears on the external portions of the child's lips, and possibly a ring attached to the stop disc, will bear in a supporting manner and thus be inhibited from falling out of the child's mouth, even when the child falls asleep and does not at all times exert the suction force which is necessary to keep the pacifier in place in its mouth. As mentioned above, this concerns infants or very young children who will not at all be able to get the pacifiers back into place if they have fallen out of their mouths.


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