Orthodontists sound alarm about disturbing new DIY trend

DIY-Braces

In early November of this year, the “Kansas City Star” aired a piece about the disturbing trend of “do-it-yourself” braces.

(Copyright 2016 KCTV – Meredith Corp. All rights reserved).

Please see the article below:

KANSAS CITY, MO (KCTV) – If you or one of your children has ever had braces, you know they can be expensive and timely. Now, orthodontists are seeing an alarming trend in teenagers trying to speed up the process by making their braces at home. In many cases, the results are disastrous. A simple YouTube search reveals dozens of videos of teenagers and other young people proudly showing how they claim to make their own braces at home using things like paper clips, hair bands and super glue. Doctors say this is incredibly dangerous.

Dr. Guy Deyton has been an orthodontist for decades. The Northland doctor thought he’d seen it all until he saw one of the most “clicked on” YouTube videos out there. The video depicts a girl proudly showing off hairbands she says she uses to close the gap in her front teeth. The video has been viewed more than a million times. “She is using hair bands! She doesn’t understand that if she is doing it inappropriately, she could lose her two front teeth,” Deyton said. The tutorial is one of countless videos and blogs from young people demonstrating how to make do-it-yourself braces. The people in the videos promise it’s an easy and inexpensive way to fix your teeth within weeks. For Deyton, these videos are the stuff his nightmares are made of.

“In one video I saw, she used a paper clip and super glue,” Deyton said. “I am so horrified and fearful that they are going to do harm to themselves.” And after researching images and cases of “DIY braces gone wrong,” he has reason to be fearful. In addition to teeth falling out, Deyton says DIY braces can cause devastating infections and, in some cases, disfigurement and permanent tooth loss.

Olivia Judah, 13, is one of Deyton’s patients. “I just got my braces on last November,” she said. Olivia’s dad was with his daughter during a recent checkup when Deyton told them about the DIY braces trend. He was in disbelief. “It sounds pretty horrifying,” Olivia’s father, Robert Judah, said. Olivia says she would rather have crooked teeth than take the risk with DIY braces.

However, there are plenty of people who are taking that risk, with countless people watching their tutorials on YouTube. “I feel like after looking at this I need to go do public service announcements and warnings … If you don’t know how to move your teeth, you could lose your teeth.” Deyton said. If money or insurance is an issue, Deyton said, there are plenty of resources in the area that offer dental work at free or greatly reduced rates.

By Chris Oberholtz and Alexis Del Cid

In the San Francisco bay area:

•The University of California San Francisco School of Dentistry offers dental services at a reduced rate. http://www.ucsfdentalcenter.org/new-patients

•The University of the Pacific School of Dentistry in San Francisco also offers dental services at a reduced rate. http://www.dental.pacific.edu/dental-services/clinics-and-services

•The Contra Costa Dental Society can provide useful information about local dental services. http://www.ccdds.org/Default.asp

•Smiles Change Lives, an international nonprofit, promotes increased self-esteem and improved oral health for children in need of orthodontic treatment whose families cannot afford the full cost of braces.

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DR. REICHHOLD

DR. REICHHOLD

Dr. Reichhold is a member of the Orthodontic Peer Review Committee of the Contra Costa Dental Society and he serves on the faculty at the UCSF Orthodontic program as an assistant clinical professor. The doctors also have been invited on numerous occasions to speak about orthodontics to dental groups. To learn more about the doctors click his image or name above.