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  • It’s scary season for kids’ teeth. Help keep them cavity-free with these tips

    It’s scary season for kids’ teeth. Help keep them cavity-free with these tips

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    As Halloween nears, you might be strategizing how to deal with your child’s annual sack of Halloween candy after a big night of trick-or-treating.

    It’s no secret that sugar is bad for teeth. But the effects of poor dental health extend far beyond a treat-heavy holiday.

    Dental issues are a leading cause of absence from school, and California ranks right near the bottom among states when it comes to kids’ oral health. However, parents can fend off sugar’s role in dental decay and infections, Venice Family Clinic dental director Dr. Jaspreet Kaur said.

    “Halloween is a reminder and a learning opportunity to set boundaries,” she said. “Teach your kids that they can enjoy the treats, but in balance.”

    Here are some tips from dentists for keeping your child’s mouth healthy at Halloween and beyond:

    Avoid chewy, sticky, hard and sour treats

    Candies that are chewy or sticky tend to stay in a child’s mouth longer than others. Soft, taffy-like candy, caramel and gummies get caught between teeth or in their grooves. Hard candies, like lollipops that children suck on, linger longer in the mouth.

    When the candy isn’t washed or brushed away quickly it produces acid, which can break down the enamel that protects teeth and causes cavities, according to Dr. Santos Cortez, a pediatric dentist in Long Beach. Sour candies are extra damaging because they not only introduce sugar to the mouth, but also acids when first eaten.

    The texture issues don’t just apply to candy either. That packet of raisins in your child’s trick-or-treat bag isn’t necessarily a better option. The sticky texture of the raisins causes the sugar to stick to the teeth in the same way as candy, making the mouth more susceptible to cavities, Cortez said.

    Juice and soda are also a problem. Like with hard candies, the sugar may stay on your child’s teeth for a while, especially if they take a long time to drink it, which means the teeth are exposed longer.

    Opt instead for sweets like chocolate — dark chocolate if you can. Chocolate, as long as it isn’t mixed with something like caramel, tends to melt in the mouth faster and is easier to brush off.

    Bring a water bottle with you on your Halloween route.

    Have your child drink water after eating candy. The water can help wash away some of the residue left behind by the sweet treat, according to Cortez. Keep a bottle handy as you trick-or-treat to have your child sip and wash off some of the stickiness as they enjoy the night. That will help reduce sugars until they are able to brush their teeth.

    Make a habit of having them drink water any time they consume sugar and can’t brush right away. Instead of bottled water, give them tap water, which should contain fluoride to help stave off dental decay.

    Of course, brush their teeth

    Make sure your child brushes their teeth as soon as possible after eating candy or anything sweet. If your child is determined to brush on their own, let them, but make sure to get in there afterward to remove plaque. Continue to brush your child’s teeth for them until they are 8 years old, using a pea-sized amount of fluoride toothpaste. Using a fluoride toothpaste helps combats the effects of sugar.

    In baby teeth, cavities tend to develop between teeth, so be sure to help you child floss once they’re ready.

    If you have a baby whose first tooth is just appearing, brush it with a small smear of fluoride toothpaste on a baby toothbrush twice a day — just enough to color the bristles. For infants without teeth, dentists recommend wiping their gums with a clean cloth after feedings.

    Remember, taking care of baby teeth is just as important as taking care of the permanent teeth. Problems that affect the baby teeth now can affect the permanent teeth later on if not addressed.

    Set rules on candy

    Set rules about how much candy your child can consume — a small amount daily. It’s better to let them eat a piece or two at once rather than allowing them to snack on sugary treats multiple times throughout the day, according to pediatric dentist Dr. Alexander Alcaraz, the program director of pediatric dentistry at USC Ostrow School of Dentistry. Constant and long exposures to sugar feed the bacteria that develop cavities. Saliva also needs time to neutralize the acids in the mouth that can break down the enamel.

    Kaur also recommends limiting the time a child sucks on hard candy such as a lollipop. Some kids will suck on candy for up to half an hour. Opt for 10 minutes, for example, she said.

    Have them eat candy with a meal

    Leave candy — or any sweets for that matter — for an after-meal snack. When kids eat, more saliva is produced, which can better wash away the goodies. It might make it easier to remember to have your kids brush their teeth soon afterward as well, since many parents have kids brush their teeth after a meal.

    Some foods also have self-cleaning qualities. Fruits and vegetables like apples, celery and carrot sticks rub into the enamel when you bite into them, removing plaque.

    Exchange the candy

    Limit how long the candy bag is available so your child does not get used to having it within reach. Remove some of the candy your child collected or trade it all for a toy or extra play time. Check if your dentist or another group is sponsoring a candy donation effort.

    You can also take part in a new tradition and invite the “Switch Witch” into your home. Have you child put aside some of their candy for the Switch Witch, who’ll visit overnight to pick up the candy and leave something fun in its place. You can leave a toy for them to find the next morning.

    “Cavities don’t happen overnight,” Alcaraz said. “It takes time. It’s not a one-day process.”

    Go to the dentist

    After the first baby tooth emerges or your child reaches age 1, it’s time to see the dentist, who can add a coat of fluoride varnish to strengthen tooth enamel. Their efforts can make the effect of sugar-filled holidays less stressful.

    A dentist will let you know early on, for example, to avoid putting an infant to bed with a bottle of milk or formula because the liquid can sit on their teeth, and the sugars cause cavities, sometimes even before the first tooth emerges.

    Developing a relationship with dentists with an appointment every six months will also help keep you better informed as they grow. For young kids, the goal is to set strategies for families to keep the teeth healthy and reduce risk of gum disease and dental decay, Cortez said.

    Ask the dentist to apply sealants to a child’s back molars around the age of 6, the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health recommends. The thin coating can protect the chewing surface of the teeth from developing cavities.

    “It’s the most common chronic disease in children, more common than asthma,” Cortez said about dental decay, which affects more than 60% of kids in California by third grade. “We need to pay more attention. And so for pediatric dentists anyway, and for all dentistry, I think that the key is to start early.”

    This article is part of The Times’ early childhood education initiative, focusing on the learning and development of California children from birth to age 5. For more information about the initiative and its philanthropic funders, go to latimes.com/earlyed.

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    Kate Sequeira

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  • A mother allegedly abducts her 8 children, flees across five states to ‘start a new life’ before her arrest

    A mother allegedly abducts her 8 children, flees across five states to ‘start a new life’ before her arrest

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    A mother of eight children is accused of abducting her children, taking them from their foster care facilities, and then fleeing across five states until police caught up with her in a small town in northern California.

    Trista Fullerton, 36, allegedly violated a court order of custody for the eight children, as well as the terms of her probation for a domestic violence conviction, when she took the kids from the town of Rogers, Ark., and fled across the country while Arkansas police tried to reach her, according to court records.

    Her father told police that Fullerton planned on heading to Arizona “to start a new life,” according to a warrant for her arrest. Instead, Fullerton was found in Anderson, Calif. — 150 miles north of Sacramento — where police said they spotted her and six of her children in a pickup truck filled with trash after someone reported that Fullerton was “displaying bizarre behavior.”

    According to an arrest warrant affidavit obtained by The Times, police from Rogers began trying to contact Fullerton on Oct. 17, after receiving a report that she had “interfered with court ordered custody of eight children.”

    Rogers Police officials declined to provide additional details on the case, including who made the initial report. A spokesperson for the department said the case is still under investigation.

    According to the affidavit, police reached out to Fullerton’s father, David Fullerton, on Oct. 18, and he told police that his daughter had told him about taking the children to Arizona. Police learned the following day that she and the children were in California, according to the affidavit.

    Police had made contact with her and the children in Redding, about 15 miles north of Anderson, but she and the children were not detained because there was no warrant.

    Rogers Police filed an arrest warrant Oct. 20, and the next day, police in Anderson, Calif., spotted her and six of her children in a Dodge pickup with Arkansas plates, according to a statement from the Anderson Police Department.

    Two of her other children were located at a nearby home in Cottonwood, according to the statement, and they were taken into custody by Shasta County Children and Family Services.

    Fullerton was booked at Shasta County Jail and is being held without bail, according to jail records. She is expected to appear in court Thursday.

    Trista Fullerton, 36, allegedly violated a court order of custody for her eight children, as well as the terms of her probation for a domestic violence conviction.

    (Anderson Police Department)

    David Fullerton, said during a brief call with a reporter that his daughter had made a “mistake” and is “innocent.”

    “My daughter stands a chance, you know,” he said. “She made a mistake. She went across the line taking her babies but she didn’t know she wasn’t supposed to.”

    Court records indicate that Fullerton was on probation at the time of her arrest in Anderson. Records also show that she had been involved in at least two instances of domestic violence, twice violating court orders to stay away from the victim. In one incident, she was accused of punching the father of one of her children in the face.

    Fullerton pleaded guilty to domestic violence on July 12, 2022 in Arkansas, after she “hit the father of her child in the face, causing physical injury” in June 2021.

    The victim is only identified in the court documents as a 40-year-old Hispanic male.

    In a court record dated Aug. 9, 2021, Fullerton indicated she had seven children at the time, ages 15, 14, 11, 7, 3, 4, and 5 months.

    She also pleaded guilty to another case of domestic battery for a Feb. 5, 2020, incident in which she “punched her boyfriend in the head multiple times and scratched his face, causing redness and bleeding on his face,” according to court records.

    Fullerton pleaded guilty to both incidents, and was sentenced to two years of probation, court records show. The terms of her probation, however, required that she not drink alcohol, not break the law and not leave the state of Arkansas without the approval of her probation officer.

    The agreement stipulated that if she violated the terms of her probation, she could face a sentence of 12 years in jail.

    On Wednesday, prosecutors requested her probation be rescinded and a $50,000 warrant was issued for her arrest.

    Prosecutors said the case is currently being reviewed and it was unclear what, if any, new charge might be filed.

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    Salvador Hernandez

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  • Mom stabbed 5-year-old son before setting apartment on fire: police

    Mom stabbed 5-year-old son before setting apartment on fire: police

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    A Georgia mother was arrested on murder and arson charges after firefighters found her 5-year-old son with multiple stab wounds at a home while battling a fire at their home, according to local police.

    The little boy, identified as 5-year-old Jayveon Pruitt, was found unresponsive with stab wounds on October 19 as firefighters responded to a fire at the apartment he shared with his mother in Peachtree Corners, Georgia, according to the Gwinnett County Police Department (GCPD). Jayveon was taken to a nearby hospital, where police said he was pronounced dead.

    On Tuesday, GCPD announced that Jayveon’s 23-year-old mother A’zaria Shante Burton, was arrested and faces numerous charges, including murder, first-degree arson, aggravated assault, tampering with evidence, possession of a knife during the commission of a crime and first-degree cruelty to children. Burton was booked into the Gwinnett County Jail and is being held without bond.

    While GCPD listed Jayveon’s age as 6 in an online statement, his father Daquarius Pruitt told local media that the boy was 5 when he died and was a few weeks shy of his sixth birthday.

    The Gwinnett County Medical Examiner’s Office is conducting an autopsy and has not determined Jayveon’s official cause and manner of death as of Tuesday night.

    Newsweek reached out via email on Tuesday to the GCPD for comment. It was unclear at the time of publication if Burton had retained an attorney who could speak on her behalf.

    A’zaria Shante Burton (pictured), 23, of Peachtree Corners, Georgia, has been arrested on murder and arson charges after firefighters found her 5-year-old son with stab wounds while responding to a fire at the apartment he shared with his mom, according to local police.
    Gwinnett County Police Department

    Shortly before 8 a.m. on October 19, the GCPD and the Gwinnett County Fire Department were dispatched to an apartment fire at an apartment on Springs Lane in Peachtree Corners, which is part of the Atlanta metropolitan area.

    The 911 call alerting Gwinnett County authorities about the situation came from a resident on the upper level of the building, GCPD said in an online statement.

    When members of the fire department arrived at the scene, they heard an “audible” fire alarm coming from a unit on the first level, police said. After making entry into the apartment, firefighters discovered an “unresponsive boy who appeared to have multiple stab wounds.” The boy was the only person inside the home while it was on fire, police said.

    GCPD launched a criminal investigation and began searching the area. Around 9:15 a.m., officers found a woman, later identified as Burton, behind the apartment building.

    “Her clothing was wet, and she was wearing only one sock,” GCPD said, adding that she was taken into custody at the scene.

    Detectives worked to determine her involvement and announced that Burton had been charged on Tuesday. The motive for Jayveon’s slaying and the fire is still under investigation, GCPD said.

    While police believe that Burton stabbed her son to death before setting their Peachtree Corners apartment on fire, Jayveon’s family told local media they’re struggling to understand what happened.

    The little boy’s dad, Daquarius Pruitt, told Atlanta station WXIA that Jayveon was supposed to visit him in Mississippi in a few weeks to celebrate his sixth birthday. He referred to his son’s death as “mind-boggling” and a “nightmare,” the station reported.

    “He was very energetic,” Pruitt said of Jayveon. “He just loved life. He loved playing. He loved his mom, he loved his dad, he loved everybody.”

    Pruitt told the station that he was still trying to come to terms with what happened to his son, saying that Burton loved the boy and took care of him.

    “He was just a great kid,” Pruitt said. “He never was trouble or anything like that, so that’s why I’m just trying to see how all this happened.”

    Chastidy Brown, identified as Pruitt’s paternal grandmother who also lives in Mississippi, told Atlanta radio station WSB that the little boy loved his parents and “even said he had the best mom ever.”

    “That’s what’s hurting the most is because everything was so normal,” Brown said, adding that she talked to Pruitt the day before he was killed.