3 mins read

Problems From Losing Baby Teeth

Baby teeth don’t remain in your child’s mouth forever. These temporary placeholders, which first begin to erupt around the first half-year of your child’s life and start falling out around the age of 6 years, require diligent care. Problems result when your child loses baby teeth too early — and some of these complications can be serious.

3 mins read

What Age Do Kids Lose Their Baby Teeth?

Teething is an important part of childhood development. Infants use their sensitive oral faculties to explore their environment and will gum and chew any object they can fit into their mouths. Primary teeth, sometimes referred to as baby teeth, are essential for helping children chew their food and learn to speak. Baby teeth also serve as a placeholder of sorts for the permanent teeth that will emerge later.

3 mins read

Children & Loose Teeth

Middle school kids compare developmental milestones, and kids who are slower to develop wonder when it will be their turn. These types of comparisons happen with young kids, too. Losing teeth is a developmental milestone. If your child is slow to lose teeth, it can be embarrassing. Growing children don’t want to have baby teeth forever.

9 mins read

9 Things They Don’t Tell You About Labor And Delivery

Relatively speaking, I think I had a fairly easygoing pregnancy. Outside of some pretty bad morning sickness in the first trimester, I remained very mobile and went to work up until it was GO TIME. I didn't have swollen ankles, I wasn't uncomfortably big, and I felt more energetic than I felt tired. So towards the end,…