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What was dental care like in your childhood ?

(234 Posts)
Jaffacake2 Sat 23-Jan-21 12:33:28

It was interesting to read the thread on hygiene during our chidhoods and when we all managed to get a hot bath or not. I thought it would be enlightening to ask about the dental care,or lack of it,through our youth.
I can't remember having a toothbrush as a child but I do remember the trips to the dentist. In the 1960s I think dentists were paid to drill and fill teeth. Please feel free to correct me if I am wrong.
All my teeth seemed to be filled by the time of being a teenager. It was very painful with no pain relief and frightening. She seemed a sadistic dentist who managed to put the drill through one of my brother's tongue. The waiting room was full of old pictures of religious scenes although for me it was a gateway to hell.
Subsequently I now have had teeth where the enamel is breaking off from large fillings. I am also scared of dentists.
How did everyone else fare during their childhood ?

hussnainimran Fri 08-May-26 21:12:14

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crazyH Fri 08-May-26 21:34:02

Awful experiences with dentists - once, bled for over 24 hours after an extraction.
I hate going to the Dentist. As a result, I don’t have the best teeth.

swampy1961 Fri 08-May-26 22:02:01

My siblings and I used to have our dental appointments booked together - I don't remember a single occasion when we didn't all have at least one filling each. It was drill and fill back then.

Redcar Fri 08-May-26 22:03:27

My mum was terrified of dentists so only took me when I had toothache. It was a council or school dentist and she didn’t do fillings so any teeth with a cavity were taken out. By the time I was 6 I had had all my back teeth removed, a lot of them at once at Guys dental school. Yes I can still remember the gas mask!
When I was about 12 my older brother took me to his dentist who was much kinder. I went to him for years until we moved. I’ve been with my present dental practice for over 40 years and they are all lovely! Different dentists obviously!
I always took my children to the dentist every 6 months and in their forties they have few fillings.

Gwyllt Sat 09-May-26 08:21:57

It’s easy to be critical of historic dentistry What has to be remembered that there was no fluoride in water or toothpaste and dentistry was in its comparative infancy. The introduction of the health service in 1948 and the system of payment meant dentists were paid for each extraction or filling. Not for any preventative work. Dentistry was very much in its infancy. My grandfather was a dentist he had no qualifications. He was one of the 1923 men who were exempt Apparently prior to the health service apparently did a lot of work on the basis of we will pay when we can and he never got paid. Don’t know if all dentist were the same as Pop was brought up in an orphanage and had very socialist views

Grandmabatty Sat 09-May-26 08:27:32

The dentist is was taken to as a child didn't believe in pain control, so there were no injections. He filled many of my teeth and I'm sure some unnecessarily. He was an alcoholic we discovered later and didn't like women or children.

nanna8 Sat 09-May-26 08:29:09

Tell you what,those old mercury fillings stood the test of time and I still have a couple from the London dentist when I was about 10. He was an Aussie, I remember his accent was a bit different. They’d be free, my Mum wouldn’t have paid for anything like that. I didn’t get my wisdom teeth until I was about 50 and then only a couple of them. Obviously not wise.

fancyflowers Sat 09-May-26 13:41:54

This brings back awful memories. I always had to go to the dentist on my own, my mum never came with me.

I can remember one dentist telling me that he couldn't do the filling while I was screaming.

We now have a lovely dentist, and we even followed him when he moved practice. That's how passionate I am about keeping my good dentist!