A commentary on

Kerr R, Claman D, Amini H, Alexy E, Kumar A, Casamassimo P S.

Evaluation of the Ability of Five- to 11-Year-Olds to Brush Their Teeth Effectively with Manual and Electric Toothbrushing. Pediatr Dent 2019 15; 41: 20-24.

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Commentary

The objective of this study was to help develop a set of characteristics that could help parents, care givers and health professionals determine when a child is ready to brush their own teeth in an effective way. Ideally, a child should brush for two minutes to ensure adequate plaque removal. A second objective was to determine the effectiveness of manual and electric toothbrushing and to compare them. Which toothbrush technique the child had been taught was not taken into account in this study and the fact that the child was only observed brushing on one occasion diminishes the impact of the findings of this study. The children in the study were from low socioeconomic backgrounds and if socioeconomic status is associated with motor skillsets and function the results may not be generalisable to the population at large. There has been very little work carried out globally on exact proficiency sets linked to the skill of tooth brushing and the question of 'when can my child brush alone?' can be a difficult question to answer.

As the age sets of children here were broad with children aged from 5-11 years, further work needs to be carried out to ascertain age specific motor skillsets. The strengths of this study were, however, the use of motor skill markers from other fields of child development and the relatively large sample size.