NY city may receive dental facility for children
The city of Tonawanda, NY, may soon get a new research and development facility that caters to the oral and facial surgery needs of children,
The city of Tonawanda, NY, may soon get a new research and development facility that caters to the oral and facial surgery needs of children,
The Economist is reporting that children in Britain and Germany have the healthiest teeth, according to data from the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
OraMetrix, a developer of technology designed to improve the experience of wearing orthodontic braces, has raised $8.1 million in equity funding, according to a story
The Ronald McDonald House Charities (RMHC) recently unveiled a new Ronald McDonald Care Mobile in Northwest Arkansas that it claims will be the area’s first
Bottled water already receives much flak because of its contributions to global environmental waste issues. Now a new study finds it may also be contributing
The current issue of Academic Pediatrics, devoted entirely to children’s oral health, offers a ”midterm examination” of how far the U.S. has come since the
The American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry (AAPD) has hired a large public relations firm to raise awareness of the importance of pediatric dentistry. MWW Group,
Dentifrices with 0.50% concentration of chlorhexidine can help control gingivitis and bleeding in orthodontic patients as well as 0.75% concentrations, according to a study in
A new report from the Childhood Cancer Survivor Study confirms another late toxicity that dentists have long suspected: Radiation exposure to the face during treatment
An Iowa woman who believes that Procter & Gamble’s Fixodent and GlaxoSmithKline’s Super Poligrip denture adhesive creams caused her neuropathy, is suing the two companies.
In “The Curious Case of Benjamin Button” — a short story published by F. Scott Fitzgerald in 1921, made more famous by actor Brad Pitt’s
Kentucky is embarking on a three-year initiative to improve dental health among children throughout Eastern Kentucky that Gov. Steve Beshear is calling “aggressive (and) potentially