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Keeping Your Mouth Healthy This HalloweenKeeping Your Mouth Healthy This HalloweenKeeping Your Mouth Healthy This HalloweenKeeping Your Mouth Healthy This Halloween
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August 19, 2015
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Keeping Your Mouth Healthy This Halloween

Published by 41Staff1 on October 19, 2015
Categories
  • Healthy Tips
  • Oral Health
Tags
  • Candy
  • Halloween
  • Oral Health

Halloween is just around the corner, and along with costumes comes candy – and lots of it. Of course, you could tell your child they aren’t allowed to eat it, but be prepared for disappointment. Although it is still highly recommended to limit your child’s consumption of candy, we have some tips for keeping your child’s mouth healthy during the holiday, without taking away all of their hard-earned treats. Thanks to our friends at MouthHealthy.org for putting together the following list:

  • Eat Halloween candy and other sugary foods with meals or shortly after mealtime. Saliva production increases during meals and helps cancel out acids produced by bacteria in your mouth, and rinses away food particles.
  • How to Take Care of Your Teeth During HalloweenAvoid hard candy and other sweets that stay in your mouth for a long time. Besides how often you snack, the length of time sugary food is in your mouth plays a role in tooth decay. Unless it is a sugar-free product, candies that stay in your mouth for a long period of time create an increased risk for tooth decay.
  • Avoid sticky candies that cling to your teeth. Stickier candies, like taffy and gummy bears, take longer to get washed away by saliva, increasing the risk for tooth decay.
  • Drink more water. Drinking optimally fluoridated water can help prevent tooth decay. If you choose bottled water, look for kinds that are fluoridated.
  • Maintain a healthy diet. Your body is like a complex machine. The foods you choose as fuel, and how often you “fill up,” affect your general health and that of your teeth and gums.
  • Avoid beverages with added sugar such as soda, sports drinks or flavored waters. When teeth come in frequent contact with beverages that contain sugar, the risk of tooth decay increases.
  • Chew gum that has the ADA Seal. Chewing sugarless gum for 20 minutes after meals helps reduce tooth decay because increased saliva flow helps wash out food and neutralize the acid produced by dental plaque bacteria.
  • Brush your teeth twice a day with an ADA-accepted fluoride toothpaste. Also, replace your toothbrush every three or four months, or sooner if the bristles are frayed. A worn toothbrush won’t do a good job of cleaning your teeth.
  • Clean between teeth daily with floss. Decay-causing bacteria get between teeth where toothbrush bristles can’t reach.Flossing helps remove plaque and food particles from between the teeth and under the gum line.
  • Visit an ADA member dentist. Regular visits to your ADA-member dentist can help prevent problems from occurring and catch those that do occur early, when they are easy to “treat.”

 

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