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Western News: September 13, 2016

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18<br />

Tuesday <strong>September</strong> <strong>13</strong> <strong>2016</strong><br />

<strong>News</strong><br />

WESTERN NEWS<br />

Getting to the root of Canterbury<br />

By the time an average<br />

Canterbury child turns<br />

five, they will have<br />

had at least one tooth<br />

decayed, extracted<br />

or filled. Gabrielle<br />

Stuart looked into the<br />

problem, and the work<br />

local groups are doing<br />

to turn it around<br />

FOUR-YEAR-OLD Leah<br />

Gibbons is proud of her sparkly<br />

white teeth.<br />

Some of her peers are not so<br />

lucky.<br />

One in every three children in<br />

Christchurch will have problems<br />

with their teeth before they start<br />

school – a filling needed, or even<br />

rotten teeth removed.<br />

In the worst cases local dentists<br />

have seen, pre-schoolers<br />

have had to have all their teeth<br />

removed.<br />

Some pre-schoolers are already<br />

so self-conscious about their<br />

teeth, they are afraid to smile.<br />

Fizzy and sugary drinks – now<br />

often cheaper than buying water<br />

– take a share of the blame, as<br />

do a lack of regular brushing<br />

SMILES: Four-year-old Walnut Tree Preschool children Ayla Kittelty, Tyson Taukiri and Leah<br />

Gibbons have been to their dental check-ups – but many of their peers have missed out.<br />

PHOTO: MARTIN HUNTER<br />

or missed dental appointments<br />

which could have caught problems<br />

early.<br />

But missing appointments did<br />

not mean someone was a bad<br />

parent, CDHB community and<br />

public health advisory committee<br />

member Rochelle Faimalo<br />

said.<br />

“A lot of the hubs are open<br />

during school hours, which<br />

makes it very hard for working<br />

parents,” she said.<br />

As a busy parent, it was easy to<br />

lose track of when children were<br />

due for check-ups, she said.<br />

Part of the problem is families<br />

falling through the cracks in the<br />

dental system.<br />

Pre-schoolers are supposed to<br />

have free dental check-ups each<br />

year, when they are two, three<br />

and four, and then when they<br />

start school.<br />

BY THE NUMBERS:<br />

•One in every three<br />

Canterbury children will<br />

have problems with their<br />

teeth, from cavities to<br />

extractions, by the time<br />

they start school<br />

•The average Canterbury<br />

pre-schooler will have<br />

problems with one tooth,<br />

a Māori child two teeth,<br />

and a Pasifika child three<br />

•One in every six preschoolers<br />

had their dental<br />

enrolments cancelled<br />

because their family<br />

could not be contacted –<br />

1184 children in total.<br />

•The CDHB aims to<br />

have 95 per cent of<br />

preschoolers enrolled in<br />

dental services. Last year<br />

just 61 per cent were, a<br />

drop from 69 per cent in<br />

2014<br />

Under the current system,<br />

families are called three times<br />

within the space of a month to<br />

remind them of a check-up.<br />

But if they don’t respond or<br />

can’t be reached within that<br />

time, they are cut from the<br />

system.<br />

Want to be elected?<br />

• Local Council<br />

• Community Board<br />

• Ecan<br />

• CDHB<br />

You need to talk to Star Media<br />

about your campaign today.<br />

Let us help you.<br />

Call Alana Powell<br />

P. 03 962 8753 | M. 027 535 6583<br />

E. alana.powell@starmedia.kiwi<br />

0800 793 364<br />

www.heritagefunerals.co.nz<br />

www.hagley.school.nz

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