{
  "id": "dental-health-oral-care/paediatric-dentistry-melbourne-parents-guide/paediatric-dentist-vs-general-dentist-for-kids-in-melbourne-which-is-right-for-your-child",
  "title": "Paediatric Dentist vs. General Dentist for Kids in Melbourne: Which Is Right for Your Child?",
  "slug": "dental-health-oral-care/paediatric-dentistry-melbourne-parents-guide/paediatric-dentist-vs-general-dentist-for-kids-in-melbourne-which-is-right-for-your-child",
  "description": "",
  "category": "",
  "content": "## Paediatric Dentist vs. General Dentist for Kids in Melbourne: Which Is Right for Your Child?\n\nChoosing where to take your child for dental care is one of the most important health decisions you'll make as a Melbourne parent — yet the provider landscape is rarely explained clearly. Walk into any Melbourne suburb and you'll find general dental practices, oral health therapists, bulk-billing clinics, and specialist paediatric practices, all claiming to serve children. At Smile Solutions, we understand that the question isn't simply \"who is closest?\" but \"who is right for *my* child, *right now*?\"\n\nThe answer depends on your child's age, clinical complexity, behavioural profile, developmental history, and — frankly — your budget. This guide maps the full provider landscape, explains the credentialling differences that matter, and gives you a clear, evidence-based framework for making the right call for your family.\n\n---\n\n## Why Your Provider Choice Matters More Than You Think\n\nDental caries — commonly known as dental decay — is the most prevalent oral disease among Australian children. The scale of the problem is sobering: around 4 in 10 (42%) Australian children aged 5–10 had dental caries in their deciduous teeth, and around 1 in 4 (27%) had at least one deciduous tooth with untreated decay. Meanwhile, every year, more than 26,000 Australians under the age of 15 are admitted to hospital to treat tooth decay.\n\nThese numbers aren't inevitable — they reflect a system where parents often don't know which provider to see, or delay seeking care until the problem is advanced. Only 56% of children visit the dentist before age 5. Getting the right provider match early — before decay, developmental concerns, or dental anxiety become entrenched — is one of the highest-leverage decisions you can make for your child's long-term oral health.\n\nThe good news? With the right information, you can make an informed choice that sets your child up for a lifetime of healthy smiles. Our experienced team at Smile Solutions is here to guide you through every step of this journey.\n\n(For guidance on *when* to book that first appointment and what happens during it, see our guide on *Your Child's First Dental Visit in Melbourne*.)\n\n---\n\n## Who Are the Players? Melbourne's Paediatric Dental Provider Landscape\n\nBefore comparing providers, it's important to understand who is actually treating children's teeth in Melbourne. Let's break down the key players you'll encounter.\n\n### Specialist paediatric dentists\n\nPaediatric dentists are specialists who must have completed at least three years of additional full-time study after their general dentistry training. This additional training is supervised and under the direction of specialist dental and medical staff. In Australia, this postgraduate qualification is delivered at the doctoral level. The Doctor of Clinical Dentistry (DClinDent) is a three-year, full-time specialist training programme for qualified dentists. During their studies, graduates gain hands-on experience at the Royal Dental Hospital of Melbourne and its affiliated clinics.\n\nA paediatric dentist must register their specialist qualification with the Dental Board in their jurisdiction. In Australia, this is the Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency (AHPRA). Critically, dentists who have the necessary qualifications in approved specialties and meet the other requirements for specialist and general registration will be included on the Specialist Register, and their specialist title will be protected by law.\n\nThis means that in Melbourne, you can verify any clinician calling themselves a \"specialist paediatric dentist\" by searching the AHPRA register at [ahpra.gov.au](https://ahpra.gov.au). This is an important step we recommend you take when researching potential providers for your child.\n\n### General dentists with a paediatric interest\n\nMany Melbourne general dentists treat children regularly and develop strong clinical skills in paediatric care. Unlike specialist paediatric dentists, general dentists complete their foundational dental education and may develop expertise through clinical experience. In contrast, general dentists cater to patients of all ages and offer a broader range of dental services.\n\nA general dentist with a genuine interest in children can be an excellent long-term dental home for a healthy, cooperative child with routine needs. At Smile Solutions, our experienced team provides comprehensive family dental care with a gentle and caring approach, and we understand when that relationship should be supplemented by a specialist referral to ensure your child receives the most appropriate level of care.\n\n### Dental therapists and oral health therapists\n\nA dental therapist has training of 2–3 years, mainly on procedures for the primary dentition. They're often the first person your child may see in any given practice. There may be limits placed on the types of fillings they're able to offer. Dental therapists are frequently employed in Victoria's community health dental clinics and school dental programmes, and provide valuable preventive and routine restorative care for children within their defined scope of practice.\n\nUnderstanding these distinctions helps you make informed decisions about where to seek care for your child's specific needs.\n\n---\n\n## Head-to-Head: Paediatric Specialist vs. General Dentist for Children\n\nThe following table summarises the key differences across the dimensions that matter most to you as a Melbourne parent.\n\n| Dimension | Specialist Paediatric Dentist | General Dentist |\n|---|---|---|\n| **Post-graduate training** | 3-year DClinDent; AHPRA specialist registration | Undergraduate degree only (5–6 years) |\n| **Scope of patients** | Children only (birth to ~18 years) | All ages |\n| **Behavioural management** | Full spectrum: TSD, distraction, nitrous oxide, IV sedation, GA | Basic TSD; nitrous oxide varies by practice |\n| **Clinic environment** | Purpose-designed for children | Mixed-age environment |\n| **Complex/special needs** | Core competency | Requires referral for complex cases |\n| **Developmental assessment** | Comprehensive (eruption, occlusion, growth) | Competent for routine assessment |\n| **CDBS acceptance** | Most accept; specialist fees may exceed CDBS cap | Most bulk-bill CDBS |\n| **Out-of-pocket cost** | Higher (specialist gap fees common) | Lower to nil for CDBS-eligible children |\n| **Referral required?** | No — self-referral accepted | No |\n\nThis comparison gives you a clear framework for understanding what each provider type brings to your child's care. At Smile Solutions, we believe in transparency about these differences so you can make the best choice for your family.\n\n---\n\n## What the Training Difference Actually Means in the Chair\n\nThe three-year specialist doctorate isn't simply more of the same dentistry. The course comprises a mix of coursework, clinical work, action/clinical research, and research training, and is designed to conform to the educational requirements of the Australasian Academy of Paediatric Dentistry. An extra three years of specialist training is completed following a basic dental degree. This training also includes the management of children with complicated medical conditions, and part of the training is usually undertaken within a Children's Hospital here in Australia.\n\nIn practical terms, this means a specialist paediatric dentist has:\n\n**Extensive hospital-based experience** managing children with complex medical histories, developmental disabilities, and severe dental disease under general anaesthesia. This level of expertise is invaluable when your child has unique health needs.\n\n**Deep behavioural management training**, including advanced pharmacological techniques. This means they have a comprehensive toolkit for helping anxious or uncooperative children receive the care they need.\n\n**Developmental expertise** — the ability to identify subtle signs of delayed eruption, jaw discrepancies, and early orthodontic concerns that a generalist may not be trained to recognise. Early identification of these issues can make a significant difference in treatment outcomes.\n\n**Research-informed practice** — training in research methodology is an integral part of the programme, with the aim of achieving excellence in paediatric oral health-related research. This ensures their clinical approach is grounded in the latest evidence-based care.\n\nThis advanced training translates directly into clinical excellence when your child is in the chair, particularly for complex cases.\n\n---\n\n## Behavioural Management: Where the Specialist Difference Is Most Visible\n\nFor most children, a routine dental visit involves no more than a friendly clinician, a gentle examination, and some positive reinforcement. But for children with dental anxiety, developmental conditions, or complex treatment needs, behavioural management is the clinical skill that determines whether treatment happens at all.\n\nBehavioural management techniques such as desensitisation, positive-negative reinforcement, and tell-show-do are the first attempt to overcome unwanted behaviours during dental procedures. These non-pharmacological approaches are used across all providers. The key difference is what happens when they're insufficient.\n\n### Nitrous oxide (happy gas)\n\nNitrous oxide gas helps reduce your child's pain and anxiety during dental procedures. You need to give consent before your child has sedation. Children usually recover quickly from the effects of nitrous oxide gas sedation. While some general dentists offer nitrous oxide, specialist paediatric practices use it as a core tool, and their teams are specifically trained in its administration for young patients.\n\nFactors to consider before using nitrous oxide for a paediatric patient include your child's physical and emotional development, medical and dental histories, and dental treatment needed; alternative behaviour guidance options; and the credentials and training of the dentist and other dental personnel.\n\nAt Smile Solutions, we maintain state-of-the-art facilities and ensure our team is trained in the latest techniques for keeping your child comfortable and calm during their visit.\n\n### Conscious sedation and general anaesthesia\n\nFor children who cannot be managed with nitrous oxide — including those with severe anxiety, intellectual disabilities, or extensive multi-tooth treatment needs — conscious sedation or treatment under general anaesthesia (GA) may be required. This is almost exclusively the domain of specialist paediatric dentists, typically delivered in hospital settings. Providing optimal oral health care for children with special health care needs is an integral professional and ethical responsibility of dentists. Children with special health care needs may have behavioural factors, medical complexities, and/or intellectual disabilities which influence their ability to cooperate for dental treatment.\n\nUnderstanding these options helps you prepare for what your child might need, and when a specialist referral becomes the most appropriate path forward.\n\n---\n\n## The Clinic Environment: Why It's Not Just About Décor\n\nSpecialist paediatric dental practices in Melbourne are purpose-built for children. A physical work environment that's child-friendly with bright colours, amusing décor and captivating play areas helps create a positive experience for children. This helps to relieve their anxiety and makes them feel more comfortable during their visit.\n\nThis isn't superficial. The dental environment has a direct impact on your child's willingness to cooperate — and on whether they develop dental anxiety that persists into adulthood. Paediatric dentists receive training on creating a comfortable and welcoming environment and using child-friendly equipment and behaviour management techniques. This environment helps to create a positive experience for your child and your family.\n\nGeneral dental practices, by contrast, serve adults and children in the same space, often with the same equipment, waiting rooms, and clinical aesthetics. At Smile Solutions, we strive to create a welcoming environment for patients of all ages, recognising that for a nervous four-year-old, the clinical setting plays an important role in their comfort and cooperation. Our team takes pride in our gentle and caring approach, ensuring every visit is as stress-free as possible for your entire family.\n\nThe environment you choose for your child's dental care can shape their relationship with oral health for years to come. We take this responsibility seriously.\n\n---\n\n## CDBS, Costs, and the Financial Reality for Melbourne Families\n\nCost is a legitimate and important factor in this decision. Understanding how the Child Dental Benefits Schedule (CDBS) interacts with both provider types is essential for making an informed choice that works for your family's budget.\n\n### What the CDBS covers\n\nServices Australia covers up to $1,158 for each eligible child over 2 calendar years for basic dental services under CDBS. The cap amount is indexed yearly on 1 January. Your child can get CDBS when all of the following applies: they're eligible for Medicare, they're between 0 and 17 years old for at least one day that calendar year, and you or they get an eligible payment at least once that calendar year.\n\nCovered services include examinations, X-rays, cleaning, fissure sealing, fillings, root canal treatment, and extractions. The CDBS cannot be used to pay for specialist services like orthodontics or services provided under general anaesthetic.\n\nThis government scheme is designed to make essential dental care accessible for eligible families, and understanding how to maximise this benefit is an important part of planning your child's dental care.\n\n### CDBS and specialist paediatric dentists\n\nThis is where Melbourne parents need to understand a critical nuance: the CDBS benefit amount is the same regardless of whether you see a general dentist or a specialist paediatric dentist. However, specialist practices often charge fees above the CDBS schedule, meaning there may be an out-of-pocket gap. Some specialist paediatric practices in Melbourne do bulk-bill CDBS-eligible patients for standard services; others charge a gap fee for specialist consultations.\n\nThe practical upshot for your family:\n- For routine preventive care (check-ups, cleans, fissure sealing) in a healthy, cooperative child: a general dentist or dental therapist who bulk-bills CDBS is a financially sound choice.\n- For complex treatment, sedation, or special needs management: the specialist fee is typically warranted and, in many cases, unavoidable. Treatment under GA is excluded from CDBS regardless of provider.\n\nAt Smile Solutions, we're transparent about costs and work with you to understand your CDBS eligibility and how to maximise your benefits. We believe world-class care should be accessible, and we're here to help you navigate the financial aspects of your child's dental health.\n\n(For a full breakdown of costs, rebates, and public clinic access in Victoria, see our guide on *Melbourne Parent's Guide to Children's Dental Costs, Rebates & Government Schemes*.)\n\n---\n\n## When Should You See a Specialist Paediatric Dentist?\n\nThis is the question Melbourne parents most need answered. The following scenarios are clear indicators for specialist referral or direct specialist care. Understanding these situations helps you recognise when your child's needs require specialist-level expertise.\n\n### Your child has significant dental anxiety or has had a traumatic dental experience\n\nIf your child has previously had a distressing dental experience, refuses to open their mouth, or has extreme anxiety that prevents examination, a specialist paediatric dentist has the full toolkit — including nitrous oxide, oral sedation, and GA — to break the cycle before it becomes a lifelong phobia.\n\nDental anxiety in childhood can persist into adulthood, affecting your child's willingness to seek care for decades. Early intervention with a specialist trained in advanced behavioural management can make all the difference.\n\n### Your child has a developmental disability, chronic medical condition, or special needs\n\nOne of the most challenging tasks for dentists is to provide safe and effective dental care for children with special health care needs. Providing effective treatment is particularly challenging in this patient population due to altered physiological parameters, limitations in communication, atypical neurodevelopment, and/or absence of typical motor coordination. Specialist paediatric dentists are specifically trained for this population and have access to hospital facilities when required.\n\nIf your child has autism spectrum disorder, cerebral palsy, Down syndrome, or any other condition that affects their ability to cooperate for dental treatment, a specialist paediatric dentist offers the expertise and environment needed for safe, compassionate care.\n\n### Your child has extensive decay requiring multiple restorations\n\nWhen your young child has decay across multiple teeth — particularly if they're under five — the clinical complexity of managing treatment safely and effectively typically exceeds what a general dental practice is equipped to provide. Early childhood caries (ECC) is a recognised clinical entity requiring specialist-level management.\n\nMultiple restorations in young children often require sedation or general anaesthesia, and coordinating this level of care is a core competency of specialist paediatric dentists. They have the training and hospital affiliations to manage these complex cases with clinical excellence.\n\n### Developmental or eruption concerns\n\nIf your general dentist has identified concerns about delayed tooth eruption, abnormal tooth development, supernumerary teeth, or early signs of jaw discrepancy, a specialist paediatric dentist is best placed to assess these issues and coordinate care with orthodontists if needed. Early identification and intervention can prevent more complex problems down the track.\n\n(See our guide on *Children's Dental Development Explained* for the full developmental milestones reference.)\n\n### Dental trauma\n\nKnocked-out or fractured teeth in children require prompt, age-appropriate management that considers the proximity of permanent tooth buds, your child's developmental stage, and long-term aesthetic and functional outcomes. Specialist paediatric dentists manage dental trauma as a core part of their practice.\n\nIf your child has experienced dental trauma, seeking specialist care ensures the best possible outcome for both immediate treatment and long-term oral health.\n\n### When a general dentist is the right choice\n\nA general dentist who is experienced with children is entirely appropriate for:\n- Healthy children with no behavioural concerns\n- Routine six-monthly check-ups, cleans, and preventive treatments\n- Simple single-surface fillings in a cooperative child\n- Fluoride applications and fissure sealants\n- Families seeking bulk-billed CDBS care\n\nThe key is that a good general dentist will also know their limits and refer appropriately when a case exceeds their scope. At Smile Solutions, we maintain strong professional relationships with specialist paediatric dentists throughout Melbourne, ensuring seamless referrals when your child's needs require specialist-level care. Our commitment to comprehensive dental care means we always put your child's best interests first.\n\nWe're here to be your partner in your child's oral health journey, providing expert guidance at every stage.\n\n---\n\n\n---\n\n## Specialist Paediatric Dentists at Smile Solutions\n\nAt Smile Solutions, you have access to three board-registered Specialist Paediatric Dentists at the **Collins Street Specialist Centre (CSSC), Level 8**, Manchester Unity Building:\n\n**Dr Susan Hinckfuss** (BDSc, DCD) — Specialist Paediatric Dentist since 2010. Dr Hinckfuss trained at the University of Melbourne and the University of Minnesota, and has extensive experience managing children with dental anxiety, developmental concerns, and special health care needs. She brings a calm, child-centred approach to even the most anxious young patients.\n\n**Dr Sarah Scott** (BBiomedSci Hons, BDent Syd, DClinDent Paeds) — Specialist Paediatric Dentist with postgraduate paediatric training from the University of Sydney. Dr Scott consults at the Collins Street Specialist Centre, Smile Solutions, and Core Dental Berwick, offering broad geographic accessibility for Melbourne families.\n\n**Dr Angel Babu** (DClinDent Paeds, Otago) — Specialist Paediatric Dentist dual-registered in Australia and New Zealand. Dr Babu trained at the University of Otago and consults at the CSSC and Core Dental Caroline Springs and Carrum Downs, extending access to Melbourne's growing western and south-eastern suburbs.\n\n### What Sets the Smile Solutions Paediatric Model Apart\n\nUnlike a standalone specialist practice, Smile Solutions offers seamless internal referrals. A child who begins with a general dentist or oral health therapist at Level 1 can be referred to a paediatric specialist at Level 8 without changing practices — with shared digital records and coordinated treatment planning across both tiers of care. This integrated model reduces the coordination burden on parents and ensures continuity of care throughout every stage of your child's development.\n\nFor CDBS-claimable routine care, our team of paediatric-focused oral health therapists (including **Naomi Hoopmann**, **Isabelle Sayers**, and **Elizabeth Baker**) provides preventive services, hygiene appointments, and early intervention monitoring. Specialist paediatric consultations are available by referral from our general dental team or by self-referral directly to the CSSC.\n\n**To book: call 13 13 96 or visit smilesolutions.com.au.** Our practice is located at Level 1 & 8, 220 Collins Street, Manchester Unity Building (corner Collins & Swanston, directly above Melbourne Central Station).\n\n## How to Verify a Specialist Paediatric Dentist in Melbourne\n\nAny dentist calling themselves a \"specialist paediatric dentist\" in Melbourne must be registered as such with AHPRA. AHPRA lists registered oral health therapists, hygienists, dentists, and specialists in Australia. You can check the registration and qualifications of clinicians online at [ahpra.gov.au](https://ahpra.gov.au).\n\nWhen searching, look for the specialist title \"Paediatric Dentist\" in the AHPRA register. A general dentist who treats children but does not hold specialist registration cannot legally use this title. This verification step is simple but important — it ensures you're getting the level of expertise you expect.\n\nMelbourne also has paediatric dental specialists affiliated with the Royal Children's Hospital and the Royal Dental Hospital of Melbourne, which are important resources for complex and hospital-based cases. These institutions represent world-class care and are valuable partners in managing the most challenging paediatric dental cases.\n\nTaking a few minutes to verify credentials gives you confidence that your child is receiving specialist-level care from appropriately trained professionals.\n\n---\n\n## Key Takeaways\n\n- Specialist paediatric dentists hold an additional three-year clinical doctorate (DClinDent) beyond their general dental degree and must be registered as specialists with AHPRA — a title that is legally protected. This advanced training translates directly into clinical expertise.\n\n- For healthy, cooperative children with routine needs, a general dentist or dental therapist who accepts the CDBS is a clinically appropriate and cost-effective choice. There's no need to seek specialist care if your child's needs are straightforward.\n\n- Specialist referral is warranted for children with dental anxiety, developmental disabilities, complex decay, dental trauma, or eruption/developmental concerns. Recognising these situations early ensures your child gets the right level of care.\n\n- The CDBS provides up to $1,158 over two calendar years for eligible children aged 0–17, but does not cover treatment under general anaesthesia or specialist-only services like orthodontics — meaning out-of-pocket costs at specialist practices are common. Understanding this helps you plan financially.\n\n- You can verify any specialist paediatric dentist's credentials by searching the AHPRA public register at [ahpra.gov.au](https://ahpra.gov.au) before booking. This simple step ensures you're making an informed choice.\n\nAt Smile Solutions, we're committed to helping you understand these important distinctions so you can make the best decisions for your child's oral health.\n\n---\n\n## Conclusion\n\nThe choice between a paediatric specialist and a general dentist isn't a binary one — it's a dynamic decision that should be revisited as your child grows, their dental needs evolve, and their relationship with dental care develops. For most Melbourne families, a trusted general dentist who knows their child well, accepts the CDBS, and maintains a clear referral pathway to specialist services is the backbone of good paediatric oral health care. The specialist paediatric dentist isn't a replacement for that relationship — but for the scenarios outlined above, they're an irreplaceable resource.\n\nUnderstanding the full provider landscape — from dental therapists in community clinics to doctoral-trained specialists at Melbourne's major hospitals — gives you the knowledge to advocate effectively for your child at every stage of their dental journey. At Smile Solutions, we're committed to helping Melbourne families make informed decisions about their children's dental health, providing comprehensive care with clinical excellence and a gentle, caring approach.\n\nWhether your child needs routine preventive care or more complex specialist intervention, we're here to guide you with personalised treatment recommendations and expert advice. Our experienced team understands that every child is unique, and we take the time to understand your child's specific needs and your family's concerns.\n\nReady to book your child's next dental appointment? Call Smile Solutions on **13 13 96** or book online at smilesolutions.com.au. Our specialist paediatric dentists — **Dr Susan Hinckfuss** (BDSc, DCD), **Dr Sarah Scott** (BBiomedSci, BDent, DClinDent), and **Dr Angel Babu** (DClinDent, Otago) — consult from the **Collins Street Specialist Centre (CSSC), Level 8**, Manchester Unity Building, Melbourne CBD. For routine children's dentistry, our Level 1 general dental team provides comprehensive family care with seamless in-house referrals to paediatric specialists when needed.\n\n*This article is part of our Complete Children's Dental Health Guide for Melbourne Parents. Related reading: [Children's Dental Development Explained: Baby Teeth, Milestones & What to Expect at Every Age] | [Your Child's First Dental Visit in Melbourne: What to Expect, When to Book & How to Prepare] | [Melbourne Parent's Guide to Children's Dental Costs, Rebates & Government Schemes]*\n\n---\n\n## References\n\n- Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW). \"Dental Health.\" *Australia's Children*, 2022. https://www.aihw.gov.au/reports/children-youth/australias-children/contents/health/dental-health\n\n- Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW). \"Oral Health and Dental Care in Australia: Healthy Teeth.\" *AIHW*, 2024. https://www.aihw.gov.au/reports/dental-oral-health/oral-health-and-dental-care-in-australia/contents/healthy-teeth\n\n- Services Australia. \"What's Covered by the Child Dental Benefits Schedule.\" *Australian Government*, Updated January 2026. https://www.servicesaustralia.gov.au/whats-covered-child-dental-benefits-schedule\n\n- Services Australia. \"Who Can Get the Child Dental Benefits Schedule.\" *Australian Government*, Updated April 2024. https://www.servicesaustralia.gov.au/who-can-get-child-dental-benefits-schedule\n\n- Australian Government Department of Health, Disability and Ageing. \"Child Dental Benefits Schedule.\" *Australian Government*, Updated December 2025. https://www.health.gov.au/our-work/child-dental-benefits-schedule\n\n- The University of Melbourne. \"Doctor of Clinical Dentistry.\" *Melbourne Dental School*, 2024. https://study.unimelb.edu.au/find/courses/graduate/doctor-of-clinical-dentistry/\n\n- The University of Western Australia. \"Doctor of Clinical Dentistry (Paediatric Dentistry).\" *UWA*, 2024. https://www.uwa.edu.au/study/courses/doctor-of-clinical-dentistry\n\n- Australasian Academy of Paediatric Dentistry (AAPD). \"Specialist Training Programs.\" *AAPD*, 2024. https://aapd.org.au/specialist-training-program/\n\n- Royal Children's Hospital Melbourne. \"Kids Health Info: Sedation (Nitrous Oxide) for Dental Procedures.\" *RCH*, 2024. https://www.rch.org.au/kidsinfo/fact_sheets/Sedation_nitrous_oxide_for_dental_procedures/\n\n- Australian Dental Association (ADA). \"Increasing Numbers of Kids Hospitalised for Preventable Oral Problems.\" *ADA*, 2024. https://ada.org.au/increasing-numbers-of-kids-hospitalised-for-preventable-oral-problems\n\n- Ha DH, Roberts-Thomson KF, Arrow P, Peres KG & Do LG. \"Children's Oral Health Status in Australia, 2012–14.\" In Do LG & Spencer AJ (eds), *Oral Health of Australian Children: The National Child Oral Health Study 2012–14*. University of Adelaide Press, 2016.\n\n- Almarzouq SSFS, Chua H, Yiu CKY, Lam PPY. \"Effectiveness of Nonpharmacological Behavioural Interventions in Managing Dental Fear and Anxiety Among Children: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.\" *Healthcare*, 12(5):537, 2024.\n\n---\n\n## Label Facts Summary\n\n> **Disclaimer:** All facts and statements below are general product information, not professional advice. Consult relevant experts for specific guidance.\n\n### Verified Label Facts\n- Product name: Product\n\n### General Product Claims\n- Paediatric dentists complete three additional years of specialist training after general dentistry degree\n- Paediatric dentist specialist title is legally protected by AHPRA in Australia\n- Paediatric dentists earn Doctor of Clinical Dentistry (DClinDent) degree\n- Paediatric dentist credentials can be verified on AHPRA register at ahpra.gov.au\n- General dentists treat patients of all ages\n- Dental therapists have 2-3 years training for primary dentition procedures\n- Oral health therapists provide preventive and routine restorative care\n- Approximately 42% of Australian children aged 5-10 have dental caries\n- Approximately 27% of children have untreated decay in deciduous teeth\n- More than 26,000 Australian children under 15 are hospitalised annually for tooth decay\n- Only 56% of children visit the dentist before age 5\n- CDBS provides up to $1,158 over two calendar years (indexed yearly on 1 January)\n- CDBS covers children aged 0 to 17 years who are Medicare eligible and receive eligible government payment\n- CDBS covers examinations, X-rays, cleaning, fissure sealing, fillings, root canal treatment, and extractions\n- CDBS does not cover orthodontics or general anaesthesia services\n- CDBS benefit amount is the same for specialists and general dentists\n- Paediatric dentists receive training at Royal Dental Hospital of Melbourne and affiliated clinics including Children's Hospitals\n- Tell-Show-Do (TSD) is a behavioural management technique used in dental care\n- Nitrous oxide sedation reduces pain and anxiety during dental procedures\n- Paediatric dentists routinely use nitrous oxide as a core tool\n- Paediatric dentists can provide conscious sedation and general anaesthesia (typically in hospital settings)\n- Paediatric dental clinics are purpose-built with child-specific environments\n- Paediatric dentists are trained to manage children with autism spectrum disorder, cerebral palsy, and Down syndrome\n- Early childhood caries (ECC) is a recognised clinical entity requiring specialist-level management\n- Paediatric dentists have hospital affiliations for complex cases requiring sedation or GA\n- Paediatric dentist training includes research methodology and evidence-based practice\n- Self-referral is accepted for both paediatric dentists and general dentists\n- Smile Solutions refers to paediatric specialists when needed\n- Smile Solutions provides family dental care\n- Smile Solutions is located in Melbourne with experienced staff providing a gentle approach\n\n---\n\n## Frequently Asked Questions\n\nWhat is a paediatric dentist: A dentist with three additional years of specialist training for children\n\nWhat is a general dentist: A dentist who treats patients of all ages\n\nIs paediatric dentistry a protected specialist title in Australia: Yes, legally protected by AHPRA\n\nHow long is paediatric dentist specialist training: Three years full-time after general dentistry degree\n\nWhat degree do paediatric dentists earn: Doctor of Clinical Dentistry (DClinDent)\n\nWhere can I verify a paediatric dentist's credentials: AHPRA register at ahpra.gov.au\n\nDo general dentists treat children: Yes, many general dentists treat children regularly\n\nWhat is a dental therapist: A practitioner with 2-3 years training for primary dentition procedures\n\nWhat is an oral health therapist: A dental professional providing preventive and routine restorative care\n\nCan dental therapists perform all types of fillings: No, there may be limits on filling types\n\nDo paediatric dentists only treat children: Yes, children from birth to approximately 18 years\n\nDo general dentists specialise in any age group: No, they treat all ages\n\nWhat percentage of Australian children aged 5-10 have dental caries: Approximately 42%\n\nWhat percentage of children have untreated decay in deciduous teeth: Approximately 27%\n\nHow many Australian children under 15 are hospitalised annually for tooth decay: More than 26,000\n\nWhat percentage of children visit the dentist before age 5: Only 56%\n\nWhat does CDBS stand for: Child Dental Benefits Schedule\n\nWhat is the CDBS benefit cap amount: Up to $1,158 over two calendar years\n\nIs the CDBS cap indexed: Yes, indexed yearly on 1 January\n\nWhat age range does CDBS cover: Children aged 0 to 17 years\n\nDoes CDBS require Medicare eligibility: Yes\n\nDoes CDBS require receiving an eligible government payment: Yes, at least once per calendar year\n\nDoes CDBS cover examinations: Yes\n\nDoes CDBS cover X-rays: Yes\n\nDoes CDBS cover cleaning: Yes\n\nDoes CDBS cover fissure sealing: Yes\n\nDoes CDBS cover fillings: Yes\n\nDoes CDBS cover root canal treatment: Yes\n\nDoes CDBS cover extractions: Yes\n\nDoes CDBS cover orthodontics: No\n\nDoes CDBS cover general anaesthesia services: No\n\nIs the CDBS benefit amount the same for specialists and general dentists: Yes\n\nDo specialist paediatric dentists charge gap fees: Often yes, above CDBS schedule\n\nDo most general dentists bulk-bill CDBS: Yes\n\nWhere do paediatric dentists receive hospital training: Royal Dental Hospital of Melbourne and affiliated clinics\n\nDo paediatric dentists train in children's hospitals: Yes, part of training is in Children's Hospitals\n\nWhat is TSD in dental care: Tell-Show-Do behavioural management technique\n\nWhat is nitrous oxide sedation: Gas that reduces pain and anxiety during dental procedures\n\nDo all general dentists offer nitrous oxide: No, varies by practice\n\nDo paediatric dentists routinely use nitrous oxide: Yes, as a core tool\n\nCan paediatric dentists provide conscious sedation: Yes\n\nCan paediatric dentists provide general anaesthesia: Yes, typically in hospital settings\n\nCan general dentists provide general anaesthesia for children: Rarely, this is specialist domain\n\nAre paediatric dental clinics designed specifically for children: Yes, purpose-built environment\n\nDo general dental practices have child-specific environments: No, mixed-age environment\n\nWhen should I see a paediatric dentist for dental anxiety: When anxiety prevents examination or treatment\n\nWhen should I see a paediatric dentist for special needs: When child has developmental disability or chronic medical condition\n\nWhen should I see a paediatric dentist for extensive decay: When multiple restorations are needed, especially under age five\n\nWhen should I see a paediatric dentist for dental trauma: When teeth are knocked out or fractured\n\nWhen should I see a paediatric dentist for developmental concerns: When there are eruption or jaw development issues\n\nIs a general dentist appropriate for routine check-ups in healthy children: Yes\n\nIs a general dentist appropriate for simple fillings in cooperative children: Yes\n\nIs a general dentist appropriate for fluoride applications: Yes\n\nIs a general dentist appropriate for fissure sealants: Yes\n\nShould general dentists refer complex cases to specialists: Yes\n\nDo paediatric dentists manage children with autism spectrum disorder: Yes, specifically trained for this\n\nDo paediatric dentists manage children with cerebral palsy: Yes, specifically trained for this\n\nDo paediatric dentists manage children with Down syndrome: Yes, specifically trained for this\n\nWhat is early childhood caries (ECC): Recognised clinical entity requiring specialist-level management\n\nDo paediatric dentists have hospital affiliations: Yes, for complex cases requiring sedation or GA\n\nWhere is the Royal Dental Hospital of Melbourne located: Melbourne, Victoria\n\nIs the Royal Children's Hospital affiliated with paediatric dentists: Yes\n\nDoes paediatric dentist training include research methodology: Yes, integral part of programme\n\nAre paediatric dentists trained in evidence-based practice: Yes, research-informed practice is core\n\nDo paediatric dentists assess developmental milestones: Yes, comprehensive developmental assessment\n\nDo general dentists assess developmental milestones: Yes, competent for routine assessment\n\nCan I self-refer to a paediatric dentist: Yes, no referral required\n\nCan I self-refer to a general dentist: Yes, no referral required\n\nDo paediatric clinic environments reduce child anxiety: Yes, child-friendly design impacts cooperation\n\nDoes clinic environment affect long-term dental anxiety: Yes, can prevent anxiety persisting into adulthood\n\nAre paediatric dentists trained in behaviour management techniques: Yes, extensive advanced training\n\nDo general dentists use basic behaviour management: Yes, basic TSD techniques\n\nWhat is the Australasian Academy of Paediatric Dentistry: Professional body setting educational requirements for specialists\n\nIs paediatric dentist training supervised: Yes, by specialist dental and medical staff\n\nDoes Smile Solutions accept CDBS: Value not published - contact manufacturer directly\n\nDoes Smile Solutions refer to paediatric specialists when needed: Yes\n\nDoes Smile Solutions provide family dental care: Yes\n\nIs Smile Solutions located in Melbourne: Yes\n\nDoes Smile Solutions have experienced staff: Yes, as stated\n\nDoes Smile Solutions offer a gentle approach: Yes, gentle and caring approach emphasised",
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