Blog
Prevention
Cavity prevention, sealants, fluoride and diet.
How to choose the best toothpaste for your child
Fluoride level, flavor, and age-appropriate amount.
Read articleHow much fluoride toothpaste for kids?
Smear, rice-grain, pea — matched to age.
Read articleBreastfeeding and cavities: what the science says
Nighttime feeding, weaning and cavity risk.
Read articleDental sealants: the single best cavity prevention for 6-year molars
A 10-minute varnish that cuts molar cavities by up to 80%. Here's why every 6-year molar should get one.
Read articleXylitol gum, mints, and wipes: how to actually use them
Step-by-step, dentist-approved: how to handle xylitol gum, mints, and wipes at home and know when to book a visit.
Read articleProbiotic lozenges for kids' mouths: hype or help?
The short, jargon-free science of probiotic lozenges for kids' mouths — enough to make confident decisions with your dentist.
Read articleElectric vs manual toothbrush for kids: what the evidence says
The short, jargon-free science of electric vs manual toothbrush for kids — enough to make confident decisions with your dentist.
Read articleSports drinks and kids' teeth: the acid attack you can't see
The short, jargon-free science of sports drinks and kids' teeth — enough to make confident decisions with your dentist.
Read articleJuice, milk, and water: the best drinks for kids' teeth
The dental impact of juice, milk, and water, explained — with practical swaps for busy families.
Read articleSticky snacks: why gummies and fruit chews are worse than chocolate
The dental impact of sticky snacks, explained — with practical swaps for busy families.
Read articleXylitol for kids: does the gum and lozenge really work?
The short, jargon-free science of xylitol for kids — enough to make confident decisions with your dentist.
Read articleCalcium, vitamin D, and strong teeth: a parent's nutrition guide
The dental impact of calcium, vitamin d, and strong teeth, explained — with practical swaps for busy families.
Read articleNews and stories
What's changing in pediatric dentistry — and what it means for your family
The pediatric dentistry blog is where we cover what's new — new evidence, new guidelines, new technology, new legislation — with the same commitment to parent readability as the rest of the site. Where an update genuinely changes what parents should do (revised fluoride toothpaste guidance, new IADT trauma protocols, updated recommendations on sealants for high-risk kids), we say so up front and link to the practical updates in our guides and treatment library. Where an update is technical and doesn't change practice, we still cover it — parents deserve to see how the field is evolving even when the day-to-day advice is the same. The blog also profiles pediatric specialists, community programs, and families navigating unusual clinical journeys.
We publish weekly, prioritised by relevance to family decision-making rather than by search-engine appeal. Posts are structured with a short summary, the update or story, and — critically — what it means for parents right now: whether to change a habit, request a new discussion at the next visit, or simply file the information away. Posts are cross-linked with the treatments, conditions and guides libraries so a news update on, say, silver diamine fluoride connects back to the treatment page where indications, evidence and alternatives are covered in depth. We accept reader-submitted questions and case stories (anonymised) and turn frequently-asked questions into standing guides when the pattern emerges.
The four things this pillar actually covers
Evidence updates
New research, revised guidelines from AAPD, EAPD, AAO and IADT, and shifts in the evidence base that change how parents should think about specific decisions.
Technology and technique
New imaging, minimally-invasive techniques, sedation innovations and appliance advances — with an honest read on which are genuinely better and which are marketing.
Community and profiles
Pediatric specialists doing meaningful work, community dental programs, and family stories that shed light on less-visible clinical journeys.
Policy and access
Insurance changes, state Medicaid updates, school-based dental programs, and the equity story of pediatric dental access in different regions.
How it works
Four steps from question to answer
Skim the summary
Every post opens with a 2-minute summary so you decide whether to keep reading.
Check the parent takeaway
The specific practical implication for your family — the reason we wrote the post.
Dig into the linked guide
Blog posts link into the deep-dive guide where the topic is covered fully.
Subscribe or bookmark
One email a fortnight with the updates that actually change day-to-day family care — no filler.
Frequently asked
Answers to the questions parents ask us most
How often do you publish?
Weekly, on average — sometimes more when a major guideline changes, sometimes less around holidays. Every post is medically reviewed before publication and dated with a clear last-updated timestamp if content changes later.
Do you accept guest posts or sponsored content?
We accept guest posts from board-certified pediatric dentists, orthodontists and related specialists, subject to the same medical review and independence standards as staff content. We do not accept paid or sponsored content — the site is funded by the specialist directory, not by editorial placements.
Can I republish or quote your posts?
Short quotes with attribution are welcome. Full reprints require permission. Please contact us before reusing images or substantive extracts, especially for commercial use.
How can I suggest a topic?
Send topic requests through the contact form. We prioritise topics based on parent search patterns, evidence-base gaps in existing internet coverage, and reviewer availability. Well-scoped suggestions typically make it into the queue within a couple of months.
Is the blog a substitute for professional advice?
No — blog content is educational and does not replace an in-person exam. Where a post discusses a clinical decision, it's written to help you have a better conversation with your child's dentist, not to make the decision on your own.