A sad statistic that 25% of those over 60 have no teeth. Those who still have teeth have an average of 19 teeth; fewer than when they were a toddler. This leads to a significant decrease in eating fruits, vegetables and other nutritious fiber foods. It also leads to increased consumption of high carbohydrate and high fat soft foods. It is not surprising to discover there is a clear independent correlation between tooth loss and chronic heart disease, hypertension, stroke, cancer and other systemic diseases.
The sad reality for me is that the biological foundation for oral health establishes itself by age 3, before most people even consider taking their children to the dentist. One of our bylines in our practice is "The first tooth deserves a dental home." We recommend the first dental visit for a child as soon as the first tooth appears. The primary focus of that visit is a consultation with parents about how to create a healthy mouth free of cavities and gum disease. Creating good oral health is easier, takes less time and is immensely less expensive than fixing the ravages of cavities and gum disease.
And, obviously, from the statistics above it is easy to see it leads to vastly improved quality of life. Even if we ignore the countless uncomfortable and expensive visits to the dentist for treatment of oral disease and just think of over age 60. Are you planning on 20 to 30 years of "baby food" in those glorious retirement years?
Doing the right things for your children early will make huge differences for their long term health and enjoyment of life. The first tooth deserves a dental home.
Yeah, you have said truth. My teeth are also valuable to me. So evrybody should be careful to his/her teeth.
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