The dental industry in America is massive. Why is it such an important part of the American lifestyle?

  • Jamie@jamie.moe
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    1 year ago

    Because all of our food is stuffed with sugar and our teeth rot rapidly as a result.

  • Bob@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I’m American, but I’ve lived in several different countries pretty much my whole life.

    Culturally, America is a little weird about keeping up appearances no matter the cost. That’s not exclusively an American thing, obviously, but in my experience, we’re the absolute worst at this. People will do absolutely, wildly insane and irresponsible shit to make sure they look like they have their shit together, including getting into debt. Again, I know this all happens overseas too, but everything is louder, flashier, bigger here, and so is this.

    One of the biggest cultural problems that we have is the deeply ingrained idea that poverty is the result of poor choices, stupidity, etc. — and when I say “deeply ingrained”, I mean deeply ingrained. Most people don’t even realize that they feel that way, and even people who are poor through absolutely no fault of their own may believe deep down that it is their fault and they’re worthless or stupid etc. Once again, the idea that people are poor because they make bad choices is not uniquely American by any stretch of the imagination, but it’s orders of magnitude more deeply ingrained and pervasive here, so much so that just looking like you’re poor in can ruin your chances in life.

    What does that have to do with teeth? Well, they’re an indicator of socioeconomic status here. I have a snaggle tooth that I’m only self-conscious about when I’m here. People notice, they will literally avert their eyes when they see it, and I instinctively hide it to the point of avoiding smiling altogether. When I’m in Japan, or Ireland (or really anywhere in Europe), not only do I not feel self-conscious at all, but it’s not hard to find other snaggle-toothed people, all smiling without a care in the world. As long as your teeth aren’t rotten or something, nobody seems to care.

    Every time I’ve been to the dentist in the US, they’ve mentioned that tooth like it’s a problem that needs to be corrected, even though there’s nothing wrong with it other than the fact that it’s not straight like my other teeth. They offer braces, extractions, all kinds of shit. I keep my mouth very clean and I’ve never had a cavity in my life (I’m 42), I just have this one weird lil tooth.

    When I go to the dentist overseas, they never really bring it up. They check my teeth for cavities etc. compliment my oral health, and send me on my way. The only time a non-American dentist brought it up was when he asked if it was hurting my upper lip or anything of that nature. No one outside the US ever treated it like it was a health issue that needed correction or offered me unsolicited advice for correcting it. (Disclaimer: a snaggle tooth CAN cause health problems if it makes it difficult to clean your mouth etc, but mine doesn’t — please don’t use my words as an excuse not to address issues that may be damaging your oral health).

    TLDR: anything other than perfectly straight teeth makes Americans think you’re poor and being poor means you’re lazy/dumb/whatever therefore you must fix it regardless of cost. So it’s a huge industry here.

    • SuddenDownpour@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Great response. It’s one thing to want to have good dental health, it’s something else entirely to want to have every single one of your teeth perfectly aligned, absolutely white and positioned in artificially curated angles.

    • aidan@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Honestly I would really disagree with your claim that Americans are more obsessed with appearance and have more of a negative impression of poverty. In the Midwest/South I never saw any judgement of anyone because of their financial situation. It might be more common in coastal cities. I think there are vain people everywhere, and I haven’t noticed any more or less living outside the US. I really don’t understand why you think it’s so much more engrained in the US- and I wonder if it’s because of the people you interacted with in the US vs outside it. (For example maybe being in middle/highschool in the US, which is full of people being judgemental everywhere)

          • Bob@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            I lived in Europe for 12 years, and and in South America for 10. I was in Europe (mostly in the Netherlands and Ireland) from my late teens through my 20s and in Brazil from age 22 until age 32.

            I was not “studying abroad for a semester” but go off I guess.

              • Bob@lemmy.world
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                1 year ago

                Waar kom jezelf vandaan? Hoeveel talen spreek je? Begrijpt je me? Se acha muito esperto, mas eu aposto que vc não tá entendendo uma palavra do que eu estou falando. Corre no Google Translate! lmao

                I lived in The Netherlands because my father was transferred there when I was 17 and my whole family moved there. I lived in Brazil because my mother was Brazilian and I wanted to experience life there. As for Ireland, my boyfriend was from Galway and I lived with him for a few years before I came home and settled down.

                You can go ahead and say I’m lying, but being an asshole on the internet isn’t gonna make your life any better. Maybe focus on personal growth instead of being rude to random people for no reason.

  • sadreality@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Poor oral health care can have disastrous health results over all.

    Also, bad bite hurts so bad… Spending few grand is worth it. Linda like lasik

  • kava@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    US spends a lot more on healthcare than anywhere else and dental health is still healthcare. From a quick bit of research it doesn’t seem like they spend significantly more on dental industry than other countries.

    US healthcare is expensive for a number of reasons, mainly being health insurance+drug companies like $$$ and own our politicians

  • Kill_joy@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    We looked across the sea and saw the people who aren’t so obsessed with dentistry.

  • RotaryKeyboard@lemmy.ninja
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    1 year ago

    I’ve been known to skip visiting a doctor after a bad injury. But I will not skip going to the dentist once a toothache starts setting in. If I’m doing things right, archaeologists will find a perfect set of teeth among a pile of dust when they dig up my remains. I do not want to be subjected to even the slightest dental issue!

    • AggressivelyPassive@feddit.de
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      1 year ago

      Ehm, when you notice a toothache, it’s already pretty late. You should see your dentist twice a year and then the cavities can be fixed before they are even noticable.

  • zephyr@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    There was a thing in Japanese culture where women with crooked teeth were considered more beautiful

    • Airazz@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      There was also a trend where braces were extremely popular, because some teen celeb got them. My dentist friend said that even kids with perfect teeth were asking for braces, because it was the fashion at the time.

    • afraid_of_zombies2@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Do people in socialist countries not care about physical appearance? Odd since I have known people who live in planned group owned collectives and they didn’t look like any uglier or better than the rest of the population.

  • beefcat@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I don’t like having cavities.

    I don’t want to lose most of my teeth and have to wear dentures in my 60s.

    The cleaning I get every 6 months is able to remove crap that regular brushing and flossing doesn’t.

  • MrsEaves@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    It can also be read as a sign of which class you’re in. I’d blend decently with middle or upper middle class folks, but my “jacked up teeth” (others’ words, not mine) are a dead giveaway about my socioeconomic background. Fortunately, it’s only really visible on the bottom ones. This is also probably part of why my parents kicked that can down the road until it was my problem.

    I’d get braces, except I’m only just at the point (after thousands in repairs) of even having a healthy baseline since I didn’t have access to dental care for years. It’s separate and not included in our normal health insurance, and it’s also not required, so if you’re poor, it’s a cost that often gets delayed or cut altogether. Back when I was a kid or through my early career years when I was just trying to keep myself fed and housed, it probably would have been cheaper. Then I was just plain terrified of what the results would be if I DID go to the dentist. I’m still playing catch up and can’t even get to braces if I wanted to until I get my wisdom teeth pulled, because there just isn’t room otherwise.

    Tooth problems can also become more serious health problems if they get bad enough.

  • OneCardboardBox@lemmy.sdf.org
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    1 year ago

    I think an important distinction should be made between dentistry and orthodontics. I believe that in many countries with public healthcare, dental coverage is pretty normal. What many governments don’t pay for is orthodontics (teeth straightening, braces, bite fixing, etc) and so most people go without it (eg memes about British people having crooked teeth).

    In the USA, orthodontics is a huge industry. It’s all about having straight perfect teeth. I don’t know why it started, but the reason it’s stuck around is mostly aesthetics and inertia IMO. If everyone around you has straight teeth, you’ll feel left out if you have crooked teeth. It’s also a huge moneymaker for dentists themselves. I avoided dentists for several years because I got tired of them trying to sell me expensive aesthetic services, like whitening or special bite splints.

    • stinky-britches@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      Also, a smile is the first thing you notice about someone and a nice smile is better than having a mouth full of snaggle toofs. But yeah, aesthetics…

    • psychopomp@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      You get orthodontics under German public health care, still US American teeth are something else entirely. It feels like basically everybody has veneers over there.

      And yes, the UK is something else, too, when it comes to dental health care. Not in a good way, mind you.

        • psychopomp@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          I’m old enough to have grandchildren and I know exactly zero people with veneers (in Germany – I do know people from the US with). Is this a contest?

          • adamthinks@kbin.social
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            1 year ago

            Veneers are extremely uncommon in the US. That’s what they’ve saying. You said it seemed like everyone here had them.

    • Square Singer@feddit.de
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      1 year ago

      The brits are something else, they don’t count. I am from Central Europe and I was shocked when I saw the kind of teeth brits run around with.

      You know, ads for dental hygene products over here advertise with “gives you fresh breath” or “makes your teeth white”.

      Over there they advertise with “prevents your teeth from falling out”.

      That said, the “American Smile” and the obsession with super white teeth is something else. White does not equal healthy and many bleaching methods are actually bad for the health of your teeth.

        • tal@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          over 10 million Brits cannot get dental healthcare they need.

          I’m an American, but I am confident that in the UK, you can get cosmetic dental work done. You may have to pay for it – like, it may not be an NHS thing – but there is a private healthcare industry that exists alongside the state-run one in the UK.

          • originalucifer@kbin.social
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            1 year ago

            their point was that the british dental healthcare is as adequately provided for as in the US, where children die from lack of dental healthcare. ie, its not.

          • psychopomp@kbin.social
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            1 year ago

            Uh, yeah. Of course you can get private stuff. You can get that anywhere, lol. That was not the question.

            • tal@kbin.social
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              1 year ago

              I’d think that it is, given that the comparison in the comment you responded to is to orthodontics in the US.

          • psychopomp@kbin.social
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            1 year ago

            What part of „it was the first link“ don’t you understand?

            Stop spamming people’s inboxes just because you’re too fucking lazy to do a 2 min search.

              • psychopomp@kbin.social
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                1 year ago

                Lol, nobody is forcing you to click on whatever links I post, IDGAF.

                I’m not your fucking research assistant, stop being an entitled %#$, do your own fucking research and…

                Stop spamming people’s inboxes just because you’re too fucking lazy to do a 2 min search.

                Edit: Alternatively, you can pay me 80€/h and I‘ll write an extensive paper about the dental health situation in the UK, happy to help.

    • swope@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      This. I think every culture has beauty standards, and some of them inspire a lot of people to do pretty drastic procedures. It’s pretty mainstream in America to covet straight, gleaming white teeth.

      I’m guessing there’s some long history of orthodontics in USA that intersects with phrenology, marketing to people’s low self-esteem, and piggy-backing on government and orgs’ campaigns for dental health (extrapolating from medical necessity to aesthetics.)

      Also I think there’s a weird thing where parents are paying for braces for their kids. Notionally parents want their kids to be confident, but I also sense an undercurrent of social signalling of wealth and status, along the lines of putting solar panels on the north roof of the house if that’s where the neighbors will see them.