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Your Kids & Their Teeth

Smiling KidsAs modern dentistry continues to improve, children can expect entirely different dental experiences than Mom and Dad remember from childhood. Fluorides and sealants have virtually eliminated rampant decay problems. For kids nowadays, dental care is be a piece of cake.

Baby teeth do grown-up duty

Primary teeth work hard. Those 20 teeth pave the way for permanent teeth. If they’re lost prematurely, replacement teeth can crop up in unexpected—and unhealthy—places. Keep every tooth you can in that young noggin.

Accidents Happen

Despite parent’s best efforts, dental accidents sometimes happen and children get knocked-out teeth. If it’s not a skateboard accident, it’s falling out of trees or an accident on the playground. And children of any age who participate in a sports where contact is likely to occur should always be sure to use a properly fitted mouthguard.

First Visit

That all-important first visit to the dentist should come early on. We need a little time to gain trust, so we’d rather see a child very young—before he or she needs to see a drill.

What about newborns?

You can get your child used to the feeling of a clean mouth, even before baby teeth begin to emerge! Begin in babyhood, gently rubbing teeth and gums with a pad of gauze or damp cloth after every feeding. This is when positive health attitudes begin.

Different strokes

A study of tooth brushing techniques in groups of children aged 7 through 11 shows definite styles of brushing, according to age. Younger children use long, exuberant, not-too-effective strokes (parents must help!) and fewer of them; older kids use more pressure and more frequent shorter strokes. Practice, practice, practice.

Guide your Child Toward Self-Care

Parenting is a tricky business. It begins with total control over an infant’s welfare. Over years, power and responsibility transfer to the child, developing eventual self-reliance.

Age: Parent’s Role: Child’s Role:
Infancy (birth-2 years) Full-time caregiver. Totally dependent on you for proper diet and oral hygiene.
Toddler/Preschooler (2-5 years) Providing direct instruction and supervision of dental and dietary habits. Learns brushing, flossing techniques and good eating/snacking habits.
Primary School (5-13 years) Continued supervision and guidance. Brushes/flosses regularly and independently.
Adolescence (13-19 years) A good role model, offering support and approval of good eating/oral health habits. Functioning independently, and beginning to appreciate the value of conscious dental self-care.

About Yuri Kaneda, DDS

Dr. Yuri Kaneda was born in Japan and immigrated to the US when she was 4 years old with her family. She lived in Ohio, Nebraska, and Illinois before finally settling in the San Diego area. A graduate of Bonita Vista High School, she went on to the University of California Berkeley where she obtained her Bachelors in Microbiology and Immunology. After working for 2 years in growth plate research at University of California San Diego, she went to the University of California San Francisco Dental School for her Doctor of Dental Surgery degree. Upon graduation, she returned to San Diego where she worked as an associate in the practice of Drs. Morimoto and Yaryan, her childhood dentist. She then started her own practice in 1995 and has been at her present location since 1999 which happens to be across the street from her high school!

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