SOME INTERESTING FACTS
August 26, 2019
Gathered from various sources:
50% consider the smile the first facial feature they notice.
80% are not happy with their smile.
Smile enhanced procedures outnumber eyelid surgeries 5 to 1.
32% of Americans cite bad breath as the least attractive trait of their co-workers.
38.5 total days an average American spends brushing teeth over lifetime.
73% of Americans would rather go grocery shopping than floss.
60% of people don’t know that a sore jaw, when combined with chest pain, can signal a heart attack, especially in women.
Dentists recommend that a toothbrush be kept at least six (6) feet away from a toilet to avoid airborne particles resulting from the flush.
A toothpick is the object most often choked on by Americans.
Every year, kids in North America spend close to half a billion dollars on chewing gum.
The number of cavities in the average mouth is down and people are
keeping their teeth longer. People, on average, have healthier mouths than even
10 years ago.
The decline in tooth decay was greatest among kids but holds across every age
group.
Only 40% of young people age 6 to 19 have ever had a cavity in their lives. That’s down from 50% a decade ago.
Over the last ten years the proportion of people age 60 that had lost all their teeth had decreased from 33% to 25%.
Adults with post-high-school degrees had an average of three more teeth than those without a high school diploma.
Smokers remain three times more likely than non-smokers to lose all their
teeth. This figure has not changed from a decade ago.
Socio-economic status plays a definite role in one’s general and dental health.
33% of low-income adults have untreated decay. This compared with 16% of middle- and higher-income adults. 19% of kids living in poverty have untreated decay compared with 8% of higher-income kids.
More people use blue toothbrushes than red ones.
Like fingerprints, everyone’s tongue print is different
The average woman smiles about 62 times a day! A man? Only 8!
Kids laugh around 400 times a day. Grown-ups just 15.
Smilers in school yearbooks are more likely to have successful careers and marriages than their poker-faced peers.
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