from the Hartford Couriant
Junk food is the cheapest kind of food. This story shows another effect threat poverty has on children's health. - Kale
An Epidemic Of Tooth Decay Threatens Children In Poverty
By JANE LIAW
As a pediatric dentist, Dr. James Musser sees many cautionary tales.
In his 26 years of practice in Sacramento County, Calif., Musser has on occasion placed stainless steel crowns on all of a young patient's rotted baby teeth. Sometimes these tiny teeth are so decayed they are unsalvageable, and he must remove them all.
"Parents think they get a free ride on the first set," Musser said. "But baby teeth can decay and abscess, and the child can go through severe pain."
Musser sees some of the most serious cases in the county because he is one of the few pediatric specialists able to administer the general anesthesia that many of the patients referred to him require during treatment.
Tooth decay is children's worst chronic health problem, a "hidden epidemic," according to the Dental Health Foundation's 2006 " California Smile Survey."
And dental health officials say the problem will only get worse with a weak economy and fewer funds going to medical assistance programs nationwide.
In Sacramento, Yolo, Amador, El Dorado and Placer counties, for example, about 65 percent of children living in poverty do not have adequate access to dental care, according to the Sacramento District Dental Foundation. Statewide studies have shown that poor access is the result of lack of insurance.
(It's not just a California problem, as evidenced in April when a two-day free dental clinic in Tolland was overwhelmed by more than 1,000 people, many of them children who hadn't seen a dentist in years.)
More than half of all California children have experienced tooth decay by kindergarten.
Almost one in five have extensive decay, the study shows. As with many other health conditions, poor and minority children have a disproportionately high number of cavities and poor oral health.
Latino children have the highest risk for dental problems, according to the survey. Among Latinos, 72 percent have experienced decay and 26 percent had cavities on seven or more teeth.
"All things are not equal," said Gayle Mathe, manager of policy development for the California Dental Association. "Eighty percent of disease is in 25 percent of children."
Untreated tooth decay can lead to infections in other parts of the body, such as children's ears and sinuses, as pathogens spread from their teeth. Dental problems also cause children to miss many days of school, according to the Dental Health Foundation.
And dental disease is infectious: Cavity-causing bacteria can be passed from person to person, according to experts.
Dental diseases can be greatly reduced through good prevention practice such as regular dental visits, experts say, but those are precisely the practices that are sacrificed first when parents can't afford treatment.
Link to full article. May expire in future.
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