Dental Health Links Page 5
Aims to provide evidence-based research and training, leading to state of the art oral health care for patients.
British Dental Health Foundation (BDHF): Promoting the benefits of achieving and maintaining the highest standards of dental health. ...
Dental Health Services Research Unit (DHSRU) is based at the Health Informatics Centre within the division of Community Health Sciences in the School of ...
European Association of Dental Public Health. objectives, eadph. membership · constitution · executive board · meeting reports · news letters ...
Search Dental Health Clinical Trials. Enter words or phrases, separated by ... Further Dental Health Information. Other Dental Health Resources on the Web ...
craft projects for children to do during dental health month.
Licensing information for dentists, dental hygienists and dental assistants.
Our Dental Health section has been put together by specialists from one of the leading dentistry schools in the UK, the School of Dentistry at the ...
This site is the website for Oral Health and Dental Practice Management, Canada's leading dental journals, providing Canadian dentists with both clinical ...
Parents often have questions about how to take care of their children's teeth. When should you start brushing? What kind of toothpaste is best?
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Children can have bad breath just as easily as their parents. When the Webmaster of badbreathgone. com asked me to write an article on halitosis (bad breath) and children, my first thought was, Great, a no brainer! As an RN and mother who also works in close contact with children in a daycare, I've got plenty of good insight into halitosis in our little ones. When you smell the breath of a healthy child it smells fresh and clean. If it doesn't, then use this checklist of the most probable causes of the halitosis bad breath: 1. Dehydration. (which is more common than most people suspect) 2....
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There's more to keeping you pearly whites precisely that than a bit of brushing and the odd visit to a dentist. Take a look at these dental dos and don'ts. #1 Avoid Fizzy Drinks Carbonated drinks (including the diet variety and sparkling water) can cause your teeth to look older than they really are. These drinks are so highly acidic that they can actually dissolve the upper layers of the tooth. They contain high amounts of phosphorus - a mineral that can leach calcium from your bones if you consume too much and some scientists believe they can weaken your jawbone, increasing the chance of...
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