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Looking After Your Child's Teeth
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5 Tips for a Healthy Smile
  • Brush twice a day with a fluoride toothpaste
  • Have regular dental check-ups
  • Lift the lip every month and check your child’s teeth and gums
  • Choose healthy snacks
  • Drink water or milk

When to Start Brushing Teeth

As soon as your child has teeth, they should be brushed. Regular brushing helps prevent decay and gum disease. Get your child into the habit of brushing twice a day, after breakfast and before bed.

Once your child can control a pencil and begins to write when they are about five years old, they should be able to brush their own teeth. You’ll need to supervise brushing until your child is about eight years old.

It can be difficult to brush your toddler’s teeth, but keep trying because healthy teeth are important to your child’s development and for the future health of their permanent teeth. You may find it easier to stand behind your child and gently tilt their head back as you brush.


How to Brush Teeth

Brush all around the inside surfaces, where teeth meet gums, and also the top chewing surfaces. On the front of the teeth, use tiny circles all around the outside surfaces, close to the gums.


Toothpaste

Use just a smear of fluoride toothpaste on a small, soft toothbrush if your child is under six years and a pea-sized amount if your child is six years and over.


Spit, Don’t Rinse

Remember to teach your child to spit out after tooth brushing. Do not rinse with water, because a small amount of fluoride toothpaste left around the teeth will help protect them.


Get Flossing

Flossing cleans away plaque and bits of food from between your teeth and below the gum line. It gets to places your brush can’t reach. A child should start flossing when two teeth touch. This usually happens when the first back teeth appear. To begin with, you will have to floss your child’s teeth, but they will eventually learn to do it for themselves. Floss once a day.


Checking Teeth

Gently lift your child’s top lip once a month to check inside their mouth. It’s a quick and easy way to see whether decay is present in its early, treatable stages. Look for white spots at the gumline, particularly on the upper front teeth. Also look for discoloured areas or pieces of missing teeth. Check that gums look healthy, not puffy or bleeding. Visit your dental professional if you have any concerns.


Information sourced from Ministry of Health Let's Talk Teeth website www.letstalkteeth.co.nz