How to Keep Your Child’s Teeth Healthy in Lagos: A Complete Parent’s Guide

Healthy child teeth Lagos paediatric dentistry guide
Oral Health & Hygiene
📅 June 11, 2026
⏱ 8 min read
By Dovers Dental Clinic, Lekki

Your child’s dental habits — formed before age 10 — will shape the health of their teeth for life. Most adult dental problems Lagos dentists treat every day were preventable through better childhood oral care. This is the complete practical guide for Lagos parents.

Start Before the First Tooth

Oral hygiene begins at birth. After every feeding, wipe your baby’s gums with a clean, damp muslin cloth. This removes milk residue and bacteria, acclimates the infant to oral contact, and makes the transition to tooth brushing feel natural rather than strange.

When the first tooth appears — usually around 6 months — begin brushing twice daily immediately. Use a soft infant toothbrush and a smear of fluoride toothpaste no larger than a grain of rice.

Understanding Why Childhood Dental Decay Is an Epidemic in Lagos

Early Childhood Caries (ECC) — decay in children under 6 — is extremely prevalent in Lagos. The primary driver is the Nigerian feeding culture around sweet beverages: sweetened pap, Milo, malted drinks, fruit juice, and formula milk sweetened at preparation. Many children fall asleep with bottles containing sweet liquids, exposing their teeth to hours of sugar at night.

Breastfeeding at night beyond 12 months, while generally healthy, also carries decay risk for children already showing signs of dental problems.

The Bottle HabitNursing bottle caries (decay caused by prolonged bottle or breast exposure at night) is one of the most destructive patterns seen in Lagos children. It causes rapid, extensive decay of the upper front teeth in children as young as 18 months. Transition babies to cups by 12 months and avoid putting anything other than water in the bedtime bottle after the first teeth appear.

Age-by-Age Dental Care Guide

0–2 Years

  • Wipe gums from birth; begin toothbrush when first tooth arrives
  • First dental visit by age 1 or within 6 months of first tooth
  • Use rice-sized smear of fluoride toothpaste (1000ppm)
  • No juice, sweetened drinks, or honey before age 1

2–6 Years

  • Brush twice daily — child brushes, parent always checks and re-brushes
  • Pea-sized fluoride toothpaste amount
  • Limit sweet snacks to mealtimes only; water between meals
  • Dental check-up every 6 months; fissure sealants if dentist recommends
  • Begin flossing where teeth touch

6–12 Years

  • Permanent molars erupt around age 6 — immediate fissure sealants are highly protective
  • Supervise brushing until age 8–9; children lack the dexterity to clean effectively alone
  • Orthodontic assessment at age 7–8 — early intervention can be simpler than later treatment
  • Sports mouthguard if playing contact sports

12–18 Years

  • Wisdom teeth may begin developing — panoramic X-ray to assess position
  • Most orthodontic treatment happens during this period
  • Increased risk from sugary drinks (soft drinks, energy drinks) — especially relevant to Lagos teenagers
The Most Impactful Thing You Can Do TodayIf your child hasn’t seen a dentist yet and is over 12 months old, book an appointment this week. An early check-up costs between ₦10,000 and ₦30,000. Finding and treating small cavities now costs far less — in money, time, and your child’s suffering — than treating advanced decay or infections later. Prevention at this stage is genuinely life-changing.

Answering Common Lagos Parent Concerns

“Won’t baby teeth fall out anyway?” — Baby teeth are not disposable. They hold space for permanent teeth, enable speech development, and support proper nutrition. Premature loss causes permanent teeth to erupt crooked, requiring expensive orthodontic correction.

“Fluoride is dangerous.” — At the concentrations in toothpaste and municipal water, fluoride is safe and the single most evidence-backed cavity prevention intervention available. The risk-benefit ratio strongly favours use from tooth eruption.

“My child will brush when they’re ready.” — Dental decay doesn’t wait for readiness. Bacterial colonisation begins with the first tooth and decay can develop within months. Consistent parent-led brushing from the start is essential.

Frequently Asked Questions
My child is scared of the dentist. What should I do?
Choose a dentist experienced with children, begin visits before any dental treatment is needed (so the first experience is positive and non-threatening), and never use the dentist as a threat. Reading books about dental visits, playing pretend dentist at home, and using calm, positive language all help significantly.
At what age should orthodontic treatment start?
An initial orthodontic assessment at age 7–8 allows a specialist to identify problems that benefit from early (interceptive) treatment — such as crossbites, severe crowding, or jaw discrepancies. Most active orthodontic treatment (braces or aligners) begins between ages 11–14 when most permanent teeth are present.

Give Your Child a Healthy Dental Future

Dovers Dental, Lekki Phase 1, provides gentle, child-friendly dental care from the very first tooth. Book your child’s check-up today — early visits are the most important dental investment you’ll ever make for them.

Book Child’s Appointment

Book your child’s dental visit at Dovers Dental, Lekki

Visit our Child Dental Care page to see full details, or book your appointment online — MDCN-licensed dentists in Lekki Phase 1. Same-day bookings available.

Ready to Book Your Appointment?

Our dentists at Dovers Dental Clinic, Lekki, are here to help.

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