The number of preschoolers requiring
extensive dental work suggests that many parents are not enforcing
daily teeth brushing. The Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention noted an increase, the first in 40 years, in the
number of preschoolers with cavities. Dentists nationwide are seeing, at all
income levels, sometimes six to ten cavities or more. The level of decay, they
added, is so severe that they recommended using general anesthesia because
young children are unlikely to sit through such extensive procedures while they
are awake. The growing problem is due to
a combination of reasons: endless snacking, juice or sweet drinks before
bedtime, leaving a bottle of milk in the crib, parents who choose bottled water
instead of fluoridated tap water, and lack of awareness that infants should,
according to pediatric experts, visit a dentist by age 1 to be assessed for
future cavity risk, even though they may have only a few teeth. Lax parenting when it comes to brushing or
pacifying kids by giving them a sippy cup all day are important causes.
Robert G. Tupac, DDS, FACP, Inc.,
Diplomate, American Board of Prosthodontics
(661) 325-1275 |
www.drtupac.com
5060 California Ave., #170, Bakersfield, CA 93309
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