National Children’s Dental Health Month: Assistance League Helps Kids Brush Up on Good Dental Habits

Poor oral health is one of the leading causes of irregular school attendance and substandard academic performance in America.

Assistance League has been working to counter this trend since 1941 when the first dental center opened in San Pedro, CA with an all-volunteer professional staff. Since then, dental centers have sprung up in several California communities and Eugene, OR.

Several other chapters conduct in-school screenings, help fund urgent dental care with participating dentists and hold dental education programs in local schools.

The San Pedro/South Bay dental center has come a long way since it’s humble beginnings in the basement of the original chapter house. Thanks to a generous benefactor, the chapter established the Frances J. Johnson Dental Center on the third floor of its new building with three operatories staffed by paid professionals and member volunteers who do clerical work and schedule appointments.

“Our children have lots of smiles now,” said Kay Lupo, a former dental hygienist who joined the San Pedro/South Bay chapter over 20 years ago to volunteer at the center.  “Many of them come in with rampant decay and it may take many months of frequent visits to establish good dental health in these patients.”

The center serves youth ages 2 to 18 of low-income working parents who are charged a very minimum fee per visit and encouraged to be involved in their children’s at-home dental care. There is a separate orthodontic fund that allows patients to receive reduced rates at three local orthodontists.

“I love being a volunteer in our dental center,” Lupo said.  “I feel like I am really doing something important for my local community and I still get to participate in a field that I was trained for, but in a different capacity now. I see a level of treatment and patient education in our dental center that equals the best private pedodontic practices.”

Lupo added, “None of this care would be possible without the hard work of Assistance League members, the money from fundraising, and the monetary donations coming from our generous members and the local community.”

Children’s Dental Center in Eugene is housed in a fully equipped modular classroom with two treatment rooms on the grounds of Churchill High. A paid dental assistant works with volunteer dentists and hygienists to serve children with school referrals.

Thanks to a grant from the Dental Foundation of Oregon and the generosity of volunteering professionals, the Children’s Dental Center puts healthy smiles on hundreds of children who may otherwise not receive care for badly decayed teeth. The chapter donates teddy bears from its Operation Hug a Bear program to the dental center to comfort children receiving treatment and makes sure every child receives a hygiene kit on their first visit.

Other Assistance League dental centers:

Redlands Assistance League Dental Center 1947

The Dr. Earl R. Crane Children’s Dental Center, San Bernardino, 1949

The Cheri Harris Children’s Health Dental Center, Newport Beach 1952

Earl B. and Loraine H. Miller Foundation Orthodontic Center, Long Beach 1969

San Antonio Community Hospital Dental Center, the foothills Communities Upland

Dental Center Pomona Valley 1987

Dental Center Santa Ana

Dental Health Center Garden Grove

Dental Health Center Orange

Chapters offering complete for partial funding for participating dentists:

Downey

Tustin

Whittier

Salt Lake City

Education, In School Screenings, Hygiene Kits

Downey

Santa Barbara

Whittier

Salt Lake City