Small Smiles sued for alleged mistreatment of young patients
The U.S. dental clinic chain Small Smiles is facing more lawsuits over alleged mistreatment of young patients, including allegedly restraining children as young as 1
The U.S. dental clinic chain Small Smiles is facing more lawsuits over alleged mistreatment of young patients, including allegedly restraining children as young as 1
New research has called into question the effects of anesthesia on the brains of young children and sparked a call for greater understanding about potential
Kaiser Permanente has awarded a $600,000 grant to the National Assembly on School-Based Health Care (NASBHC) to increase access to oral healthcare for 3,000 children
The Canadian Institutes of Health Research will donate $1.2 million toward new research aimed at reducing childhood caries. The research will examine a new approach
Minnesota dental practitioners donated $2.5 million of free care to 5,678 Minnesota children in two days during the Minnesota Dental Association’s (MDA) Give Kids A
To celebrate his 60th birthday memorably, an Ohio dentist closed his practice for a month and went to Katmandu, Nepal, to help deliver dental care
CareCredit continued its support of the ADA Foundation’s Give Kids A Smile Fund by making its fifth consecutive $100,000 donation, the company announced. “CareCredit’s generosity
Innovative BioCeramix, a Canadian firm developing nanocomposite cements for dental and orthopedic applications, has received nearly $750,000 from the National Research Council of Canada Industrial
Smiles Across Minnesota expanded its statewide preventive dental program to the Moorhead School District on March 10, the organization announced. The program will help improve
A school-based dental program in Minnesota is one of five recipients of a grant from the Medica Foundation. Children’s Dental Service was awarded $100,000 to
As part of its national Crusade Against Cavities campaign, Dr. Fresh Dental is launching a contest to honor pediatric dentists for their charitable work with
A preventive dental program targeting preschoolers younger than age 4 administered by physicians instead of dentists effectively reduces the need for tooth decay-related treatment among