Kurbanali Alimi2 min read

Your child's first dental visit — when and why?

Sweden's National Board of Health recommends the first dental visit by age 1. Here's why it matters — and how to prepare yourself and your child.

Journal

Your child's first dental visit — when and why?

gapab.se

Many parents think the dentist is something for later — once the milk teeth are all in, or once something actually hurts. But Socialstyrelsen and 1177 are clear: the first visit should happen during the first year of life.

Why so early?

Three reasons:

  1. Early detection. Caries can start as soon as the first tooth appears. Early visits make it possible to catch problems before they become visible and painful.
  2. Comfort from the start. Children who meet the dentist early — when nothing hurts — very rarely develop dental anxiety later in life.
  3. Preventive advice for parents. The first visit is as much for the parents: we talk through diet, brushing technique, fluoride, and habits that matter most in the early years.

What does Socialstyrelsen say?

Sweden's national guidelines for dental care state that preventive measures for children — including early visits and risk assessment — measurably improve oral health later in life.1 The recommendation is that all children should be in contact with dental care from around age 1, with follow-up based on individual risk.

Dental care is free for children in Sweden

In Sweden, all dental care for children and young people is free through the year they turn 23. The first visit and every follow-up is covered. No reason to delay.2

What happens at the first visit

We know a first visit can feel big. Our approach is calm and playful:

  • The child sits on a parent's lap in the chair — nobody is forced to sit alone
  • We look inside with a mirror and count teeth together
  • No drill, no X-ray — unless there is a clear need
  • We go through at-home brushing technique and answer every question
  • We book a follow-up before you leave, so the habit is established early

How to prepare your child

1177 recommends a few simple things:

  • Talk calmly and positively about the visit — no threats ("or the dentist will be angry")
  • Let your child "play dentist" at home — open wide, count teeth with a toy brush
  • Bring a favourite toy or blanket for comfort
  • Pick a time of day when your child is well-rested

When to come back?

How often children need to come depends on individual risk — diet, fluoride, family caries history, and brushing habits. For most healthy children, a yearly or two-yearly visit is enough. With elevated risk, we see them more often.

Summary

  • First dental visit by age 1
  • Dental care is free for children through age 23 in Sweden
  • Early visits = better oral health and less fear later
  • The parent's calm attitude is the most important tool

References

  1. Socialstyrelsen — National guidelines for dental care
  2. 1177 Vårdguiden — Dental care for children and young people

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