OSCE Practice – Oral Health Advice for a Child and Parent
Practise patient communication and oral health education aligned with NEBDN OSCE expectations.
Scenario
You are a dental nurse working in a general dental practice.
A child attends for a routine dental examination with their parent. The dentist notices early signs of tooth decay and asks you to reinforce oral health advice.
The parent says:
“We try to brush, but my child does not like it and drinks juice most days.”
You are supporting the clinician and providing oral health advice to both the parent and child.
Your Task
In this OSCE scenario, you are expected to provide supportive and practical oral health advice to both a child and their parent.
You should be able to:
- Reinforce effective toothbrushing advice
- Explain the importance of fluoride toothpaste
- Discuss sugary drinks and tooth decay risk
- Encourage realistic behaviour change
- Communicate clearly with both parent and child
- Check the parent understands the advice provided
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This Scenario Assesses
This station tests important NEBDN oral health education and communication skills, including:
- Parent and child communication
- Child oral health advice
- Fluoride toothpaste knowledge
- Sugar reduction advice
- Preventive dentistry understanding
- Professional reassurance
This scenario also develops confidence in adapting communication to children and supporting parents with practical home care advice.
Model Answer / Ideal Response
A strong response should be supportive, practical, and easy for both the parent and child to understand.
Step 1 — Acknowledge the Parent’s Concern
Begin professionally and avoid judgement.
Example:
“I understand. Let’s talk about some ways to make brushing easier and help protect your child’s teeth.”
This helps build trust and encourages discussion.
Step 2 — Reinforce Toothbrushing Advice
Explain simply that children should generally:
- Brush twice daily
- Use fluoride toothpaste
- Receive parental support or supervision
- Spend enough time cleaning all tooth surfaces
Use simple language appropriate for both child and parent.
Example:
“Brushing twice a day with fluoride toothpaste helps protect teeth from decay.”
Step 3 — Discuss Sugary Drinks
Explain that:
- Frequent sugary drinks may increase tooth decay risk
- Juice still contains sugar
- Sugary drinks are generally better kept to mealtimes
Advice should feel realistic rather than restrictive.
Example:
“Small changes, such as reducing how often juice is given, can help protect teeth.”
Step 4 — Encourage Positive Habits
Avoid criticism.
Example:
“Making brushing part of a fun daily routine can often make it easier.”
This supports behaviour change positively.
Step 5 — Check Understanding
Before ending the conversation:
- Ask if the parent has questions
- Confirm understanding
Example:
“Does that make sense, or is there anything you would like me to explain again?”
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Blaming the parent
- Saying the child should brush alone
- Forgetting fluoride toothpaste advice
- Ignoring sugary drink frequency
- Using complicated terminology
- Ending the interaction without checking understanding
Key Learning Points
- Children should generally brush twice daily
- Fluoride toothpaste helps protect teeth
- Frequent sugary drinks may increase tooth decay risk
- Parents often need to support brushing routines
- Communication should remain supportive and practical
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