Tag Archives: teeth

Get your kids to the dentist now as adult pricing is a painful kick in the teeth

JED has new braces. This time they are fixed. Well, they were fixed to most of his teeth for about a day anyway.

Then two of the brackets glued to his gnashers pinged off. Earliest appointment to have them re-glued was four days later.

Why, I asked, did he need fixed braces anyway, having already endured a removable one all last year? One which had realigned his overbite by about eight millimetres?

Despite looking like he had a perfectly normal smile (not that 13-year-olds smile much, beneath their floppy fringes) his teeth had slowly reverted to their original position.

So I’m moaning about another 18 months of appointments, his painful hour of treatment when the orthodontist manhandled the thing into his gob, and the £17 needed for a special brace-face sports gumshield.

And I’m questing the need for braces for all these kids, who seem to be in on a virtual conveyor belt of fittings at specialist orthodontist clinics, paid for by the NHS.

But Jed just shrugs and says he’s not bothered about being called ‘braceface,’ and is actually pleased I make him go to the dentist. What? Are you mad? Why?

Look around, he says, at the kids with literally rotting, missing teeth. He knows teenagers who haven’t been to the dentist for years.

Their parents don’t go, so they don’t. Or the parents give them a choice – so they don’t go.

I can’t quite believe anyone would be daft enough not to make their children go to a dentist. Haven’t you ever had toothache? When your jaw hurts so much you bang your head on a wall as a distraction? You’ve seen the Simpson’s episode with the Big Book of British Smiles, yes? Do you want that for your kids?

A lot of dentists no longer offer NHS treatment. I ranted and raved when our family gob-doctor opted for cash over customers and went private. But there are plenty of dentists out there who take new NHS patients and you can find them via www.nhs.co.uk by clicking on dentists and typing your postcode. I found 19 surgeries accepting new patients within five miles of Northampton town centre.

But I suspect many adults avoid the dentist, and by default, don’t send their kids.

The NHS price for adults is shocking.

A check-up, if you aren’t on any kind of benefit is £17. Once every year? Most of us could just about manage that.

But if you need a filling, root canal or extraction, it’s £47. That’s a lot of money.

Then the jump to the ‘Band 3 course of treatment’ – ie, crowns, dentures and bridges – that’s an incredible £204.

Roughly translated: “That’ll be £20 to have a quick look, £50 to mend something and £200 to replace it.” Regardless of how big or small the job.

If you don’t want to go the dentist as an adult, that’s up to you. But that’s no excuse for not taking/ sending/dragging your kids there. Dental treatment for those under 18 or under 19 in full-time education, is FREE.

Get your mouth sorted now kids, while you can still afford to.

3 Comments

Filed under Parenting

All I want for Christmas is. . .

Billy loses tooth

THE tooth fairy deserves to get frequent flyer points for the numerous visits to our house. She came twice last weekend.

It’s an expensive time for her (or is it him?), when a child has reached five or six, and their baby teeth start dropping out. The going rate for teeth has traditionally been £1, meaning the tooth fairy will have to shell out £80 for all my children’s milk teeth over the years.

Billy, aged six and 11-months, has got five wobbly teeth at the moment, after the most precarious front top tooth finally became separated from his gob. It’s been hanging on for at least a fortnight. Usually, you can give a very wobbly tooth a quick twist and it will come away easily. Not Billy’s. His seem to become detached only on one side. We had to get the dentist to take one the last wobbler out.

This time the tooth came out in rather dramatic circumstances. A nice day out to Brixworth Country Park was on the cards, but as he went to jump out of the back of our ancient Bongo campervan he fell face-first into the gravel. Ouch.

Forgetting all the first-aid principles of not moving the patient, I scooped him up and sat him back into the van just as his wails hit an ear-splitting volume. He was so concerned about getting plasters on his grazed knees and elbows, he hadn’t realised his mouth was pouring blood. With wet-wipe ‘cold compresses’ being held on his limbs by his concerned brothers, and Fairy Godmother Aunty Nicki distracting a distressed Bonnie, I got a look at his mouth.

“Oh, at least your tooth is out,” said concerned elder brother.

“Yeah, but has he swallowed it?” asked concerned eldest brother. The wailing started again.

The brothers grim were given the task of trying to find the missing tooth among the white tooth-sized gravel where he’d fallen.

Amazingly, sharp-eyed Jed did find it. And thankfully the rest of Billy’s teeth, including the new tooth breaking through, were all intact.

Insult was added to injury when the tooth fairy missed out Billy on her nightly rounds. She was obliged to pay time and a half the following night to meet contractual obligations. (Don’t know about you but the absent-minded tooth fairy has missed teeth in our house on more than one occasion).

Over breakfast the following day, Dougie suddenly announced that he too had lost another tooth overnight, but had decided not to put it under his pillow as he wanted to keep it “and I’d rather have it than a quid.” He’s 11. haven’t all his baby teeth already come out? He showed me where a new molar was growing in its place.

Turns out children’s 20 milk teeth keep falling out until they are around 12. Jed’s just had his last adult teeth break through, just as he’s coming to the end of wearing a brace and his teeth seem to be all in the right place.

With all this palaver about teeth, baby Bonnie wants to get involved. “My teeth out for the fairy?” she asked, as I was getting her ready for bed. I solemnly examined inside her mouth. Her last milk molars at the back are just breaking through. “Not ready yet darling, soon.” (‘soon’ being the unit of time used on Bonnie for everything).

If your child is unfortunate enough to lose a tooth when it’s not wobbly, the old tip of washing it in milk and sticking it back in is actually true.

It needs to be reinserted within 30 minutes, or kept in the milk, and an emergency dentist trip sought immediately. Don’t think it doesn’t matter if a baby tooth comes out too soon, the tooth needs to be there as a ‘spacer’ until the adult teeth are ready to erupt.

Leave a comment

Filed under Parenting