Baby’s tooth decay
Tooth decay stemming from sugary drinks stored in baby’s bottle can lead to a host of long-term dental problems.The American Dental Association suggests how to protect baby’s teeth:Health Tips* Never place soft drinks, juice or sugared water in a baby’s bottle. Only use the bottle for breast milk or formula.
By our correspondents
November 25, 2015
Tooth decay stemming from sugary drinks stored in baby’s bottle can lead to a host of long-term dental problems.
The American Dental Association suggests how to protect baby’s teeth:
Health Tips
* Never place soft drinks, juice or sugared water in a baby’s bottle. Only use the bottle for breast milk or formula. Never let baby take a bottle to bed.
* Don’t put baby’s spoon or pacifier in your mouth. This will prevent transferring germs and bacteria.
* Never dip a child’s pacifier in anything sweet.
* Wipe your child’s gums with a damp, clean cloth after feedings. When teeth erupt and up until age 3, brush gently with a toothbrush and a rice grain-sized portion of fluoride toothpaste.
* From ages 3 to 6, use a pea-sized amount of fluoride toothpaste. Continue supervising your child’s tooth brushing until about age 6, when the child can reliably spit out toothpaste.
* Switch to a regular cup by your child’s first birthday.
* Establish healthy eating habits from a young age.
The American Dental Association suggests how to protect baby’s teeth:
Health Tips
* Never place soft drinks, juice or sugared water in a baby’s bottle. Only use the bottle for breast milk or formula. Never let baby take a bottle to bed.
* Don’t put baby’s spoon or pacifier in your mouth. This will prevent transferring germs and bacteria.
* Never dip a child’s pacifier in anything sweet.
* Wipe your child’s gums with a damp, clean cloth after feedings. When teeth erupt and up until age 3, brush gently with a toothbrush and a rice grain-sized portion of fluoride toothpaste.
* From ages 3 to 6, use a pea-sized amount of fluoride toothpaste. Continue supervising your child’s tooth brushing until about age 6, when the child can reliably spit out toothpaste.
* Switch to a regular cup by your child’s first birthday.
* Establish healthy eating habits from a young age.
-
Noel Gallagher Gives Shut-up Call To Critics After Receiving BRIT Award -
Pentagon Used Anthropic’s Claude AI In Iran Attack Despite Ban: Report -
Nvidia Teams Up With Telecom Firms For AI Driven 6G -
SpaceX Launches 25 Starlink Satellites On Its Falcon 9 Booster From The West Coast -
Expert Reveals What Makes Investigations Hard In Search Of Savannah Guthrie Mother Nancy: 'Silent Witness' -
'SNL's Strongly Reacts To BAFTA's Racial Slur With Tourette’s Sketch -
Austin Shooting Leaves Multiple Dead, Dozens Injured -
Meghan Markle Friends Break Silence As Duchess Plan To Return To UK -
Dua Lipa Stuns Everyone On And Off Stage At 2026 BRIT Awards -
2026’s Most Visited Websites Revealed: ChatGPT Overtakes Major Platforms -
Worst Cricket Moments That Shocked The Game -
Prince Harry, Meghan Markle Reach A Crossroads: ‘You Could Lose Everything’ -
F1 Title Race: Who Will Win 2026 Drivers’ And Constructors’ Championships? -
New Observatory Sends 800,000 Asteroid Alerts In One Night -
Cher’s Son Elijah Blue Allman Apprehended On Two Counts Of Assault At Elite Prep School -
Beatrice, Eugenie Now Face Andrew, Sarah's ‘nightmares’: 'They're Hugely Conflicted'