Make sure that you brush your child's teeth at least twice a day with a soft bristle toothbrush and a little bit of fluoride toothpaste. You can make this into a fun activity where maybe you play music or you play a game in the mirror so that your child views this as something pleasant rather than just another chore that they have to do twice a day. And another bit of advice is to start early, start as early as possible before their teeth even begin to appear and just start doing this with their gums so that they get into the routine very early on.
I recommend parents start brushing as soon as their child's first tooth appears. Even though baby teeth eventually fall out, they're essential for speech, chewing, and guiding permanent teeth into place. Make brushing a fun routine, not a chore, to help kids build healthy habits naturally. My best advice for parents is to start dental visits by age one and maintain regular checkups every six months, as recommended by the American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry (AAPD). Avoid putting your child to bed with a bottle and limit sugary snacks or drinks as early prevention is the easiest way to avoid cavities later on.
There is a great Ayurvedic protocol for baby teeth, widely practiced in the East but very few are aware of it in the West. It helps to reduce inflammation, pain, and prevents microbes. A teething baby will especially find it soothing and relaxing. The protocol is "turmeric ghee". A pinch of turmeric in ghee, and warmed using an utensil (i.e. spoon). Or, a pre-made version can be purchased. The turmeric ghee is applied to the teeth and massaged gently around the gums. Parents have to clean their fingers first, and then use their index finger to massage the gums and teeth with warm turmeric ghee. Many parents are advised to gently brush the baby's teeth. A dry bristle brush, even if 'soft', can be irritating to the soft gums and developing teeth of a baby. A finger brush with turmeric ghee is preferred ancient method written in the books of Ayurveda.
Taking care of a child's baby teeth is exactly like maintaining a small section of flashing on a roof. You must commit to meticulous, hands-on maintenance right from the start, because the failure of the small structure compromises the long-term integrity of the big structure. The one thing I do to take care of my child's baby teeth is enforce a Hands-On, Non-Negotiable Nightly Debris Audit. My goal isn't just surface cleaning; it's structurally eliminating all sources of decay. This means physically performing the brushing myself until the child is old enough to prove they can complete the job with structural competence. The crucial hands-on action is ensuring that every single tooth is perfectly cleaned before bed, with no remaining food debris to rot the enamel. We treat the nighttime cleaning as the final, absolute structural seal for the day. My best advice for parents is simple and structural: Never treat the baby teeth as temporary structures. You must commit to the hands-on integrity of those small teeth as if they were the final rafters of the roof. The structural health of the permanent, adult teeth is completely dependent on the health of the temporary baby teeth. Allowing rot and chaos in the small structure guarantees a major, expensive, structural failure in the bigger structure later. The best way to ensure long-term health is to be a person who is committed to a simple, hands-on solution that prioritizes immediate, meticulous maintenance.
We focus on making dental care a daily routine rather than a chore. From the first tooth, we use a soft brush and a tiny amount of fluoride toothpaste while keeping the experience light and consistent. The goal is to build comfort with the process early so that brushing becomes part of the child's rhythm, not something introduced only when problems arise. The best advice for parents is to treat oral health as part of overall wellness. Diet choices, hydration, and regular checkups matter as much as brushing technique. Avoid letting bottles or sweet drinks linger at bedtime and start dental visits by the first birthday. When children see that their parents treat dental care as a normal part of caring for the body, it shapes habits that last long after the baby teeth are gone.
When my son was little, I used to turn brushing into a mini competition. We'd set a timer and see who could brush "better," though I always made sure he won. It sounds simple, but kids love games more than rules. The real trick is routine—same time, same song, same smile check after. My advice to parents is don't rely only on reminders, build habits through fun. It's the same principle I use at SourcingXpro when training new staff—consistency beats effort. If brushing feels like play instead of a chore, they'll grow up doing it without being told, and that's the real win.
For my children, I always made sure to introduce brushing their teeth as a fun, regular part of our day, almost like a little game. My best advice for parents is to make oral hygiene a positive experience early on, perhaps by singing a song or using a timer that makes brushing feel less like a chore and more like a routine we enjoy together, just like preparing a tasty meal.
My business doesn't deal with "baby teeth" or parenting advice. We deal with the critical, preventative maintenance required to protect a heavy duty trucks diesel engine. However, the principle of early, preventative care is identical. The one thing I do is the Daily Operational Audit. Just as a simple daily check prevents catastrophic engine failure, a simple daily check prevents massive dental problems. I enforce this discipline because neglect is always the most expensive decision. My best advice for parents is the Systemic Maintenance Principle. You don't just focus on the component—the tooth itself. You focus on the system—diet and habits. For us, this means enforcing strict fuel quality and operational procedures to protect the high-value OEM Cummins Turbocharger. For a parent, it means eliminating the corrosive input (sugars) that compromise the foundation. The most important thing I've learned is that small, consistent preventive action is always cheaper than massive, eventual repair. We apply this to our heavy duty parts trade every day. The ultimate lesson is: Early, non-negotiable discipline is the only true insurance against eventual, painful, and expensive operational failure.