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Brush Your Teeth: Make Toothbrushing Fun

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Getting your children to brush their teeth may be a twice daily chore for your whole family. Many times it is met with fighting and tantrums from kids that just don't want to take a time out now in order to keep their mouth healthy for the remainder of their lives. While it may seem impossible, there are things that you can do to help make brushing teeth a fun job for your children.

The question:
What's a good way to get kids to brush their teeth? My eight-year-old and I struggle with this every day.
-- Michelle

The expert answers:
I remember how I hated to brush my teeth when I was young. My mom and dad would send me upstairs to brush, and would check my teeth when I finished. I outsmarted them - I would run the water, rub the toothbrush against my finger to make the brushing sound, then eat some toothpaste so my breath would smell fresh. They never caught on, but deceiving them did catch up with me - I am no stranger to cavities! (Let me assure you that this phase quickly passed!)

I suppose that is why the American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry recommends that parents continue to supervise the tooth-brushing process until age 12.

Debbie Rhodes, a dental assistant with pediatric dentist Dr Allen McCorkle of Winchester, Virginia, offered these suggestions:

  • Instead of brushing before bed, have your child brush right after dinner, or before a favorite television show.
  • Brush to music - a song normally lasts between two and three minutes, and this is the ideal amount of time needed to effectively clean your teeth. Brushing to the rhythm of the music will make it more interesting.
  • Let your child use an electric toothbrush.
  • Hold your child accountable. Ask your dentist for disclosing solution or tablets (remember those little red pills we chewed to see how clean our teeth were?). This is available from most pharmacies, but if yours doesn't carry it, ask them to order it for you. After your child brushes, give him a dose so you can both see how well he did. Better yet, brush together and have a contest using the solution or tablets to see whose teeth are cleaner.

Rhodes also shared a tip that she uses with her own children - brush their teeth in the family room. (Yes, you read that correctly.) She told me that she puts on a favorite video or TV program, sits cross-legged on the floor, positions her child's head in her lap and brushes away. (She recommends using a very small amount of toothpaste on the brush to keep the mess down.) This method allows you to see and thoroughly clean all of their teeth.

Having clean teeth is very important, and your child will soon realize this. Until he does, use these strategies to encourage him to keep his choppers charming!

More on this topic:
Straight talk on braces
Does your kid have a dirty mouth?
5 tips for a healthier, whiter smile

About the Author:
Lisamarie Sanders graduated Magna Cum Laude with a dual major in early childhood education and elementary education. She has taught students of all ages and has received numerous awards for educational excellence. She lives in the Washington, DC metropolitan area with her husband and two young children.


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Brush Your Teeth: Make Toothbrushing Fun

Joe_LoCicero
Joe_LoCicero says:
May 02, 2007

Letting the child get to pick out his or her own toothbrush has been a definite help in our household, and makes them feel more in-tune with the routine!

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Mother_Road
Mother_Road says:
April 05, 2007

I hear you on kids sneaking around doing stuff to make it look like they've brushed (when in the time it took to do all that, they could have brushed anyway!)

I did that as a kid, too -- why are we/they so goofy about it?!

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DrMommyKC
DrMommyKC says:
April 03, 2007

This is a constant struggle for us. It definitely has called for getting creative and changing it up every so often. We hung a mirror at her eye level and make sure she gets the "upstairs" and "downstairs". Also, having her show her favorite doll how she brushes her teeth and how mommy brushes her teeth has worked.

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