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Dental Visit: Preparing your Child Print E-mail
Dental Visit: Preparing your Child

By Sarah Matthews

According to the American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry, children should visit the dentist for the first time when they get their first tooth – or no later than when they turn one. But if your child gets teeth at five months old, ...
 
Tooth Decay Prompts Felony Child Neglect Charge Print E-mail
Friday May 8, 2009

According to the Herald-Tribune a Palmetto, Florida woman was charged with child neglect after authorities say she did not seek dental treatment for her daughters severe tooth decay.

The mother, Tamika S. White, apparently did take her daughter to see a dentist. The dentist diagnosed White's little girl with baby bottle tooth decay and referred the child to see a specialist for further treatment. Where is the crime you ask? After White was informed that her Medicaid coverage would not pay for the necessary treatment her daughter desperately needed, she refused to seek money for treatment through child-support payments from the child's father or locate a dentist or specialist that would accept her Medicaid coverage. Reports suggest the child suffered from pain associated with the tooth decay for over a year. The age of the child was not disclosed. Tamika S. White was subsequently arrested May 6, 2009 on a felony neglect charge.

I support the fact that the mother of this child is being held responsible for obviously neglecting her daughters teeth. Perhaps she was under the assumption that her daughters baby teeth are not important, ....to read more, click here

 
Early dental visits improve oral health Print E-mail
The UMB study involving 219 children ages six to 27 months found that the "prevention group" of 109 children ages six to 15 months had more than eight times ...

Do you remember your first dental visit? If you answered "no" chances are your first trip to see the dentist occurred when you were a child. Many parents assume that all of the primary teeth need to be present in the mouth before bringing their child to see the dentist for the first time, however the American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry recommends your child's first dental visit should occur around the time their first tooth appears. New research from the University of Maryland, Baltimore (UMB) reinforces this recommendation.

The UMB study involving 219 children ages six to 27 months found that the "prevention group" of 109 children ages six to 15 months had more than eight times less cavity-causing bacteria and less cavities at their first dental visit compared to the "control group" of 110 children ages 18 to 27 months; again this being their first dental visit and no history of preventive dental care prior to the study.
The study was conducted at the University's Pediatric Ambulatory Center, a clinic which services mainly low-income residents.

Notable findings from the study include:

for more info click here

 
Bad: New Fears Over Kids' Dental Health Print E-mail

11:53am UK, Friday April 10, 2009
Almost 30,000 children a year go to hospital to have teeth pulled out or be treated for decay, research has shown.

to read more click here...
 
Children to get lessons in brushing teeth Print E-mail

CHILDREN as young as three will be taught how to brush their teeth in school in a bid to improve Wales’ appalling dental health.

Jan 30 2009 by Madeleine Brindley

Click here to read more...

 
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