Daily Mail

One in six primary school children have rotting teeth

- By Shaun Wooller Health Editor

ONE in six children are leaving primary school with rotten teeth after gorging on sugary treats and failing to brush properly, figures reveal.

A survey of 53,073 children aged ten and 11 found 16 per cent had signs of tooth decay, with affected pupils having two rotten teeth on average.

The Office for Health Improvemen­t and Disparitie­s found stark disparitie­s between deprived and affluent areas, with rates of decay of almost one in four (23 per cent) in the poorest area – more than double the one in ten (10 per cent) in the wealthiest.

Some 3 per cent of schoolchil­dren reported they ‘often’ or ‘very often’ had pain in their teeth or mouths and 2 per cent regularly had difficulty biting or chewing firm foods.

Wolverhamp­ton has the highest percentage of children with decayed, missing or filled teeth at 42.7 per cent – compared to 12 per cent in the South West. The British Dental Associatio­n accused ministers of ‘dragging their heels’ on policies that could narrow the ‘huge oral health gap’ among children.

Chairman Eddie Crouch said they ‘have failed to grasp that decay and deprivatio­n go hand in hand’, adding: ‘ This Government likes to talk about prevention but has offered nothing. It has promised access for all but looks set to just throw money at target seats in rural England.’

Labour health spokesman Preet Kaur Gill said: ‘The Conservati­ves have left NHS dentistry to rot, and now our children’s teeth are rotting too.’

She said Labour has a ‘fully costed plan to rescue NHS dentistry... paid for by abolishing the non-dom tax status’.

Dr Helen Stewart, of the Royal College of Paediatric­s and Child Health, described the figures as ‘nothing short of

‘Huge oral health gap’

egregious’, adding: ‘If we are ever to make real sustainabl­e change then we must get serious about ending child poverty once and for all.’

The Department of Health and Social Care said it invests £3billion a year in NHS dentistry and that last year around 800,000 more children saw an NHS dentist. It is also ‘taking preventati­ve measures’, such as expanding water fluoridati­on to reduce tooth decay.

 ?? ?? Decay: Child at the dentist
Decay: Child at the dentist

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