
There seems to be a lot of confusion amongst parents, pediatricians,
and dentists about the correct timing for the first dental visit.
Many "family" dentists may tell parents not to bring children
to their practice before they have all their primary teeth (age
two or three), sometimes they even recommend to wait until age 6.
The parent of a fearful or uncooperative child may be told "we
have to wait until your child is old enough to sit still".
Under unfavorable circumstances delay of dental care can lead to
catastrophic disease progression that is not in the best interest
of the child.
The AAPD recommends an initial postnatal oral evaluation within
six months of the eruption of the first primary tooth and no later
than twelve months of age.
This means a child should have his or her first dental visit at
the first birthday!
At this examination visit the dentist should record a thorough
medical and dental history. Parents should be prepared to review
the prenatal, perinatal, and postnatal period of their child's development.
The oral examination at this early age is usually accomplished
with the parent present in the office. It is most often only a visual
exam. The child patient may be sitting in the parent's lap with
the head in the dentist's lap (knee-to-knee position).
One important aspect of this visit is to discuss the child's risk
of developing oral and dental disease. Based on this assessment
the dentist will determine the appropriate recall interval for the
next dental visit. In high risk cases this may be as early as three
months. Dental decay in children can progress very rapidly.
The dentist will also evaluate the child's oral and dental development.
The common question about "how many teeth at what age?"
will be addressed. The dentist will also evaluate the need for fluoride
supplementation. It may be important to discuss non-nutritive habits
(finger sucking, pacifier), injury prevention, oral hygiene, and
effects of diet on the dentition.
If treatment is indicated the dentist should be prepared to provide
therapy or he needs to refer the patient.
Your child's first dental visit in our office will include:
- Meeting Dr. Taheri and his staff and becoming oriented with
the dental office.
- A thorough oral examination.
- Cleaning of teeth, flossing, scaling (as needed) and office
fluoride treatment.
- Obtaining x-ray films for diagnostic purposes (only as needed).
We follow the guidelines from the American Academy of Pediatric
Dentistry and American Dental Association.
- Consulting on-
- diet
- home oral hygiene which consists of tooth brushing, tooth
paste, flossing and fluoride treatment
- oral habits
- tooth brushing technique for your child
- occlusion (bite)
- behavior management for home oral hygiene
- A diagnosis and treatment plan will be discussed with parent(s).
For your convenience, before your child's first appointment please
read the Welcome Letter for more information about the first visit.
Also, open and complete our Child's
Registration Form, fill in the all of the requested
information then, submit it to our office online. This process is
secure.
You will need Acrobat Reader installed on your computer to
open the form. Click
here to download Acrobat Reader for free.
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