**Adding this as I just remembered: My friend, had a baby that would cry so much at night. She took her baby the Doctor. He looked her over from head to toe very carefully. It was found, that a blond hair was tangled and wrapped around one of her toes, and getting tighter cutting into her skin. Because the hair was blond, it was almost invisible to the eye. The Doctor removed the hair from her toe. Then, her baby was all better. For her, this was the "problem."
This may be an untypical situation... but a baby crying, especially when so young, they usually have a reason. Even if it is just for comfort.
As for the pacifier, once she gets older and has more control over her motor skills, she will be able to "put back" her pacifier, herself.
DITTO Deanna Leigh.
How do you know she is not hungry?
A Growth-Spurt occurs every 3 months. ie: at 6 months, which has passed by already. A baby's intake needs AND appetite, naturally increases... they don't eat the same way they did 3 months ago. They eat more, and it is for developmental reasons too.
Growing pains... normal. It WILL happen even if you leave her in a cave all by herself. It is not pleasant for the baby. Then, it is not pleasant for the Parent... but, we are the parent. So we ride through it.
To me, well, in light of my 2 kids as babies... what your baby is doing it not that bad. It will pass. BUT keep in mind that other sleep phases will occur too. So, you sorta just have to bear with it.
Next, she was sick.... and after a child feels better... if OFTEN alters their usual routine, for a bit, or longer. It takes MUCH patience and effort, to get them readjusted again. AND MANY times, a child/baby is hungry after they recover... and because they are making up for the lost nutrition/calories/intake when they were sick. Being sick, takes a lot of energy out of a baby, much less an adult.
1 week of more wakings, to me is not that bad. She is very young... and ALL babies have sleep patterns that changes. It will change again... as she hits other developmental milestones or appetite/growth spurts, and gross-motor changes.
She may also be on the brink of hitting some changes in gross motor development and cognition. When this happens, keep in mind, that this will affect their sleep.... waking more. It is a NORMAL instinct in them... they will sit-up, roll over, stand up, pull up, bounce up and down, "walk" even in the crib. BUT, they DO NOT YET know "how" to go from standing and then back down to sitting, then back down to lying down... all by themselves. So you will need to wake too, and help them. Just as an example.
Anyway, it will be fine.
All the best,
Susan