Early professional dental care and infant oral hygiene practices are essential to enhance the opportunity for a child to be free of preventable oral disease.
Globally, 43% of children have untreated dental caries.1 Prevention for childhood caries needs to begin in infancy. Establishing a dental home (i.e. the first visit to the dentist) should take place no later than 12 months of age. This allows the dentist to evaluate a child’s specific risks for oral disease and also provides a venue for the dental provider to educate new parents on best practices for oral hygiene.
At the first dental visit, the practitioner will assess the child’s growth and development and can provide anticipatory guidance to the parents relating to the child’s individual risk factors. This allows the dental team to provide preventative recommendations that are personalized to the individual needs of the child. Additionally, establishing the dental home facilitates coordination of specialized care for the child, including emergency care. Studies suggest that children with an early established dental home are less likely to require costly dental treatment and are more likely to receive dental care in an appropriate dental health care facility rather than in a hospital emergency department.2,3 Lastly, research supports a child’s anxiety levels towards dental visits decreases as familiarity with the dental office environment increases.4
Early exposure to the dental setting can lead to happier, more productive and less costly dental care throughout the child’s life.
1 Global oral health status report: towards universal health coverage for oral health by 2030. Geneva: World Health Organization; 2022. License: CC BY-NC-SA 3.0 IGO.
2 Nowak AJ, Casamassimo PS, Scott J, Moulton R. Do early dental visits reduce treatment and treatment costs for children? Pediatr Dent. 2014 Nov-Dec;36(7):489-93. PMID: 25514078.
3 Allareddy V, Nalliah RP, Haque M, Johnson H, Rampa SB, Lee MK. Hospital-based emergency department visits with dental conditions among children in the United States: nationwide epidemiological data. Pediatr Dent. 2014 Sep-Oct;36(5):393-9. PMID: 25303506.
4 Greenbaum PE, Melamed BG. Pretreatment modeling: a technique for reducing children’s fear in the dental operatory. Dent Clin North Am 1988;32(4):693-704.
5 Memarpour M, Soltanimehr E, Eskandarian T. Signs and symptoms associated with primary tooth eruption: a clinical trial of nonpharmacological remedies. BMC Oral Health. 2015 Jul 28;15:88
6 American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry. Guideline on Fluoride Therapy. The Reference Manual of Pediatric Dentistry. Chicago, Ill.: American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry; 2017:181-4.
7Sjögren K, Birkhed D. Factors related to fluoride retention after toothbrushing and possible connection to caries activity. Caries Res 1993;27(6):474-7.