"My child has a small cavity. Do I take him to our family dentist, or does he really need a pediatric dentist?"
It's a question almost every parent asks at some point. And it's a fair one — after all, both dentists work on teeth. But the answer matters more than most parents realize.
Imagine this: your four-year-old daughter is anxious, squirming in the dental chair, eyes wide. A general dentist — despite being skilled and experienced — may not have the tools, training, or environment to help her feel safe. Now imagine a clinic designed exactly for her — bright, calming, managed by a specialist who speaks her language, understands her fears, and knows precisely how a four-year-old's developing jaw should look. That's the difference a pediatric dentist makes.
At Tarasha Dental Clinic – An Initiative by AIIMS Alumni, Dr. Anju Singh Rajwar leads our pediatric dental program with one guiding belief: children are not small adults. They deserve care that is built around their biology, their psychology, and their future.
Why should children see a pediatric dentist instead of a general dentist? Pediatric dentists complete 2–3 years of additional postgraduate training focused on children's oral health, behavior management, growth, and development. They use child-specific equipment, manage dental anxiety using specialized techniques, and monitor baby teeth and jaw development in ways general dentists are not trained to do.
What Is a Pediatric Dentist?
A pediatric dentist — also called a paedodontist — is a dental specialist who completes an undergraduate dental degree followed by a dedicated 2–3 year postgraduate residency in pediatric dentistry. This training goes far beyond routine dental school education.
Pediatric dentists study child psychology and behavior management, craniofacial growth and jaw development, the eruption sequence of both primary and permanent teeth, preventive dentistry techniques tailored to children, management of dental trauma in young patients, and care for children with special healthcare needs.
Think of it this way: just as you would take a sick child to a pediatrician rather than a general physician, a child's teeth and oral development deserve the same level of specialist attention. The Indian Dental Association and the American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry both recommend that children see a pediatric dentist — ideally from their very first tooth or first birthday, whichever comes sooner.
"Children are not small adults. Their teeth, their jaws, their fears, and their futures are all different — and their dentist should be trained to understand every one of those differences."
At Tarasha Dental Clinic, Dr. Anju Singh Rajwar brings AIIMS-level clinical training to pediatric dentistry in Delhi — making evidence-based, child-centred dental care accessible to families across South Delhi and beyond.
General Dentist vs Pediatric Dentist — A Detailed Comparison
Understanding what separates a pediatric dentist from a general dentist helps parents make the most informed decision for their child's health.
| Area of Care | General Dentist | Pediatric Dentist |
|---|---|---|
| Education | BDS (5 years) | BDS + MDS in Pedodontics (5 + 3 years) |
| Specialized Training in Children | ⚡ Limited (general curriculum) | ✔ Dedicated 3-year specialty training |
| Child Behaviour Management | ⚡ Basic techniques | ✔ Advanced — Tell-Show-Do, distraction, positive reinforcement, sedation |
| Baby Teeth (Primary Teeth) Care | ⚡ General knowledge | ✔ In-depth expertise in primary tooth development, RCT, crowns |
| Jaw & Growth Monitoring | ✗ Not routinely assessed | ✔ Routine at every appointment — flags orthodontic concerns early |
| Dental Anxiety Management | ⚡ Variable — depends on individual dentist | ✔ Core specialty skill — child-specific protocols |
| Preventive Dentistry | ⚡ General preventive advice | ✔ Age-specific fluoride, sealants, diet guidance, habit counselling |
| Habit Correction | ✗ Rarely addressed proactively | ✔ Thumb sucking, mouth breathing, tongue thrust — specialist management |
| Sedation Options | ⚡ Not always available | ✔ Conscious sedation and GA protocols for anxious or special needs children |
| Special Needs Dentistry | ✗ Limited training | ✔ Specific training for children with developmental and medical conditions |
| Clinic Environment | ⚡ Designed for adults | ✔ Child-friendly — scaled chairs, welcoming décor, age-appropriate tools |
| Parent Education | ⚡ Occasional guidance | ✔ Structured parent counselling at every visit |
Why Children Need Specialized Dental Care
Pediatric dentistry exists because a child's oral health needs are fundamentally different from an adult's — and the consequences of missing those differences can affect a child for life.
- Baby Teeth Are Not Temporary — They're Critical Primary teeth hold space for permanent teeth, guide their eruption, support speech development, and enable proper nutrition. Losing them too early causes crowding, misalignment, and developmental delays that can cost significantly more to correct later.
- Jaw Development Is Happening Right Now A child's jaw and facial bones grow rapidly between ages 2 and 12. Problems like crossbites, underbites, or narrow arches are far easier — and cheaper — to correct when caught early by a trained specialist.
- Speech Development Depends on Teeth Missing or misaligned baby teeth affect how children form sounds — particularly 's', 'th', 'f', and 'v'. Early dental care directly supports clear speech development.
- Nutrition and Eating Habits Are at Stake Toothaches and cavities make eating painful — particularly crunchy vegetables and nutritious foods. Children with untreated dental problems often shift to soft, sugary foods, compounding the problem.
- Permanent Teeth Need Guidance A pediatric dentist monitors when and how permanent teeth erupt, ensuring the transition from primary to adult dentition happens in the right order, at the right time, with adequate space.
- Early Orthodontic Monitoring Saves Time and Money Spotting a skeletal discrepancy at age 7 and intervening with simple early orthodontic treatment is far less complex — and less expensive — than addressing the same problem at 14.
Top Reasons Parents Choose a Pediatric Dentist
Parents who make the switch from a general dentist to a pediatric specialist consistently report the same benefits — and they're worth knowing before your child's next appointment.
A Child-Friendly Environment
Child-scale chairs, friendly wall art, calm colours, and a team trained to think like children — not adults who happen to treat children.
Gentle, Age-Appropriate Communication
Pediatric dentists speak to children — not over them. Simple, non-threatening language removes fear before treatment even begins.
Specialized Equipment
Child-sized instruments, smaller X-ray sensors, and age-appropriate materials that make procedures more accurate and more comfortable.
Expert Pain Management
Topical anaesthetics, needle-free delivery systems, and distraction techniques ensure that pain — and the memory of it — is minimized.
Preventive Dentistry First
Fluoride applications, pit and fissure sealants, dietary counselling, and habit guidance — preventing problems rather than just treating them.
Early Cavity Detection
Regular check-ups with a trained pediatric eye catch early decay before it becomes a painful — and expensive — emergency.
Building Positive Dental Habits
Children who have positive early dental experiences grow into adults who visit dentists regularly. Prevention starts in the chair.
Structured Parent Education
Every appointment includes guidance for parents — on brushing technique, diet, teething, thumb sucking, and what to expect next.
Common Dental Problems Pediatric Dentists Treat
Pediatric dentistry covers a far wider range of conditions than most parents expect. Here's what Dr. Anju Singh Rajwar and the team at Tarasha Dental Clinic treat regularly:
Cavities (Dental Caries)
The most common chronic disease in children — often preventable with the right care plan.
Toothache and Tooth Pain
Assessed and treated with age-appropriate techniques — no child should suffer with a toothache.
Dental Trauma
Chipped, cracked, avulsed, or displaced teeth — pediatric dentists manage these emergencies with protocols specific to growing teeth.
Thumb Sucking & Habits
Prolonged thumb sucking, pacifier use, and mouth breathing can reshape a growing jaw — early intervention prevents lasting damage.
Tongue Tie (Ankyloglossia)
Affects feeding, speech, and dental development — diagnosed and managed by our pediatric team from infancy.
Early Tooth Loss
When baby teeth are lost too soon, neighboring teeth drift — causing crowding and guiding problems for permanent teeth.
Space Maintainers
Custom appliances that preserve space when a baby tooth is lost prematurely, preventing permanent teeth from erupting incorrectly.
Kids Root Canal (Pulpotomy / Pulpectomy)
Saving an infected baby tooth is always preferable to extraction — kids root canal treatment does exactly that, gently and safely.
Stainless Steel Crowns
The gold standard for restoring severely decayed baby back teeth — durable, long-lasting, and placed in a single visit.
Zirconia Crowns
Tooth-coloured, aesthetic crowns for front baby teeth — natural-looking and parent-preferred for visible restorations.
Pit & Fissure Sealants
Preventive sealants applied to the grooves of back teeth — blocking the areas where 80% of childhood cavities begin.
Fluoride Therapy
Professionally applied fluoride strengthens enamel and dramatically reduces cavity risk — recommended every 6 months.
When Should Your Child Visit a Pediatric Dentist?
A child's first dental visit should happen by their first birthday, or within 6 months of their first tooth erupting — whichever comes sooner. After that, routine check-ups every 6 months help prevent problems and catch early concerns before they escalate.
The First Visit — Sooner Than You Think
Most parents wait until a problem is visible. The evidence says otherwise. Dental caries in children under 3 is increasingly common in India, and much of it is entirely preventable when parents receive early guidance on feeding habits, bottle use, and oral hygiene.
Regular Six-Monthly Check-Ups
From the first visit onward, a preventive check-up every six months is the single most powerful thing a parent can do for their child's dental future. These visits allow for fluoride applications, cavity detection, growth monitoring, and habit counselling.
Emergency Dental Visits
Dental injuries in children are common — a fall from a bicycle, a knock on the playground, a hard fall in the bathroom. Tarasha Dental Clinic prioritizes emergency appointments for trauma and acute pain. If your child has a dental injury, call us immediately at +91 96259 52590.
Orthodontic Evaluations — Age 7
The Indian Orthodontic Society and the American Association of Orthodontists both recommend a first orthodontic assessment at age 7. This is when a pediatric dentist can identify skeletal discrepancies that, if addressed now with early intervention, may eliminate or shorten future braces treatment.
Can a Pediatric Dentist Treat Anxious Children?
Dental anxiety in children is not a personality flaw — it is a normal developmental response that a well-trained pediatric dentist knows how to navigate. At Tarasha Dental Clinic, managing anxiety is considered as important as the clinical procedure itself.
Behaviour Guidance Techniques
- Tell-Show-Do Method The dentist explains what will happen in simple language, demonstrates on a model or their own hand, and then performs the procedure — eliminating the element of surprise that triggers fear.
- Positive Reinforcement Every small act of cooperation is praised and celebrated — building confidence and a positive association with the dental environment.
- Distraction Techniques Storytelling, visual distraction, and conversation help redirect a child's attention during treatment, making the experience less intimidating.
- Conscious Sedation For children who remain anxious despite behaviour management, conscious sedation (nitrous oxide or oral sedation) allows safe, comfortable treatment while keeping the child awake but deeply relaxed.
- General Anaesthesia When clinically appropriate — for very young children, extensive treatment needs, or children with special healthcare requirements — dental treatment under general anaesthesia is available through our specialist program.
Why Parents Trust Dr. Anju Singh Rajwar
Dr. Anju Singh Rajwar leads the pediatric dentistry program at Tarasha Dental Clinic, bringing postgraduate specialist training, a gentle clinical philosophy, and a genuine passion for children's health to every appointment.
Dr. Rajwar practices evidence-based, minimally invasive pediatric dentistry — with a philosophy centred on prevention, early intervention, and building positive, lasting relationships with young patients and their families. Her approach combines clinical precision with the kind of warmth that helps even the most anxious child feel at ease.
Her clinical focus includes behavior management, preventive dental care, dental trauma management, pulp therapy in primary teeth, early orthodontic monitoring, and care for children with special healthcare needs. She is a strong advocate for parent education — believing that a well-informed parent is the best long-term dental care partner a child can have.
Why Choose Tarasha Dental Clinic for Your Child?
AIIMS Alumni-Led Team
Every specialist at Tarasha trained at AIIMS — India's most respected medical institution — bringing hospital-grade clinical discipline to private pediatric dental care.
Modern Digital Dentistry
Digital X-rays (90% less radiation), intraoral cameras, and advanced diagnostic tools allow our team to detect problems earlier and explain findings to parents visually and clearly.
A Clinic Built for Children
From the waiting area to the treatment room, our clinic is designed to reduce anxiety and build trust — because a child who feels safe cooperates, and a child who cooperates receives better care.
Preventive Philosophy
We believe the best dental treatment is the one your child never needs. Prevention — not just treatment — is the foundation of everything we do.
Transparent, Ethical Treatment Planning
Clear explanations, honest cost discussions, and treatment plans that parents genuinely understand before any procedure begins.
Family-Centered Care
Parents are partners in care — present, informed, and guided at every visit. We treat the child, but we work with the whole family.
We proudly care for children from Lajpat Nagar, Greater Kailash, Defence Colony, Amar Colony, South Extension, Jangpura, East of Kailash, Moolchand, Nehru Place, and families across South Delhi and beyond.
Pediatric Dental Care in India for NRI and International Families
Many NRI families plan preventive and restorative dental care for their children during annual visits to India — combining the best of affordable, AIIMS-quality pediatric dentistry with their family visit. Whether you're visiting from the USA, UK, Canada, Australia, or the Gulf, Tarasha Dental Clinic's international patient program makes the process straightforward from the moment you contact us.
Online Consultation
Share your child's dental records or photographs before travelling — receive a specialist opinion and treatment plan from Dr. Rajwar in advance.
Fast Appointments
No long waiting lists. Treatment is scheduled around your travel dates, with multiple procedures planned to be completed within your stay.
AIIMS Specialist Care
Internationally trained, AIIMS alumni specialist — the same clinical standard parents in the UK and USA would expect at a specialist practice.
Affordable Treatment
Comprehensive pediatric dental care in India — including specialist procedures — at a fraction of costs in the USA, UK, or Australia.
NRI-Friendly Process
English-first communication, digital records, and post-visit follow-up from wherever you return home — your child's care doesn't stop when the flight takes off.
Comprehensive Pediatric Care
From routine check-ups to fillings, crowns, fluoride, sealants, and habit management — complete care for your child in one specialist visit.
Signs Your Child Should See a Pediatric Dentist Immediately
Take your child to a pediatric dentist immediately if they have a toothache, facial swelling, dental injury, loose baby teeth out of sequence, bleeding gums, white or dark spots on teeth, difficulty chewing, or persistent bad breath. Do not wait for a routine appointment — call and request an emergency slot.
🦷 Toothache
Any persistent tooth pain — especially at night — needs prompt assessment. It may indicate pulp involvement.
😬 Facial or Gum Swelling
Swelling near a tooth or under the jaw can indicate an abscess — a dental emergency requiring immediate treatment.
🏥 Dental Injury
Chipped, knocked-out, or displaced teeth — time is critical, especially for avulsed permanent teeth. Call us immediately.
⏱️ Early Tooth Loss
Baby teeth falling out before the expected age can cause permanent teeth to erupt in the wrong position.
🩸 Bleeding Gums
Gums that bleed regularly with brushing may signal early gum disease or nutritional concerns — not normal in children.
⚪ White or Brown Spots
Early decay or enamel defects — spots on the surface of teeth that a parent can see are already advanced enough to treat.
🍎 Difficulty Chewing
If your child is avoiding food or only chewing on one side, there's likely a dental cause — don't ignore it.
💨 Persistent Bad Breath
Bad breath not explained by food choices may indicate decay, infection, or gum issues requiring evaluation.
