# Policy integration of pediatric oral health: aligning medicine and dentistry for child well-being

**Authors:** Laresh N. Mistry, Saudamini More, Sumeet Agarwal, Prasad Mhaske, Vivek Sharma, Shreyas Neelkanthan

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/froh.2026.1716091 · 2026-03-05

## TL;DR

Pediatric oral health is often neglected, but integrating it with general child health services can improve outcomes and equity for children worldwide.

## Contribution

The paper proposes policy-level strategies to integrate pediatric oral health into mainstream child health systems.

## Key findings

- Early childhood caries affect 60%–90% of children globally, especially disadvantaged groups.
- Structural barriers like fragmented education and poor insurance limit access to preventive oral care.
- Policy integration and systemic reforms are needed to make oral health a core part of child well-being.

## Abstract

Oral health remains a critical yet overlooked aspect of pediatric health, despite strong evidence linking untreated dental disease with systemic complications, impaired growth, and reduced quality of life. Globally, early childhood caries and related oral conditions affect 60%–90% of children, disproportionately impacting disadvantaged groups. However, pediatric oral health is often siloed from mainstream child health services. Pediatricians, frequently the first point of contact for families, have limited oral health training, while pediatric dentists often see children only when conditions have advanced, reducing opportunities for prevention and early care. Structural barriers—including fragmented professional education, poor referral systems, inadequate insurance, and inconsistent access to preventive services—further limit progress. Families face significant out-of-pocket costs, particularly in low- and middle-income countries, where preventive oral care is excluded from many pediatric health packages. Caregiver health literacy and cultural beliefs also contribute to delayed care-seeking. A policy-level response is essential to bridge these gaps. Key strategies include integrating oral health into routine pediatric visits, advancing interprofessional education, expanding insurance coverage for preventive services, and adopting innovative care models such as telehealth and task-shifting. Embedding pediatric oral health into universal health coverage and child health policies will promote equity and sustainability. Urgent systemic reforms are needed to position pediatric oral health as a core component of child well-being, requiring coordinated action among pediatricians, pediatric dentists, and public health policymakers.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** growth (MESH:D006130), dental disease (MESH:D009057), oral conditions (MESH:D020763), caries (MESH:D003731)

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12999557