Friday, March 6, 2009

Breaking that Nail Biting Habit -- Dr. Danny Weiss

A tooth’s duty is to chew food, but often we see patients whose teeth have picked up an undesirable side job – chewing nails.

A familiar habit, nail biting is common in childhood, adolescence, and early adulthood. Teenagers are the most frequent culprits, boys tend toward nail biting more than girls, and most adults have dropped the habit by the age of 30.

Adults can beat the nail-biting habit with a little will power. Follow these tips:

--Keep nails trimmed and filed. Paying positive attention to your nails can help you overcome the urge to bite.
--Have regular manicures or paint nails regularly. Polish serves as a visual reminder to avoid biting, or a reward after a week of abstinence.
--Cover nails with a bitter-tasting polish. It’s difficult to bite your nails when they taste like pepper.
--Snap a rubber band on the inside of the wrist when nail biting occurs. Train yourself to stop biting with a negative physical response.
--Ask a family member for help. If you find yourself biting your nails without thinking about it, a family member can (kindly) point out your behavior to you.
--Carry a nail file and clippers. When the urge to bite strikes, file or trim instead.

You can help your children quit with some patience. Follow these tips:

--Be clear about the problems with nail biting. Explain that you don’t like nail biting because it’s unhealthy and it makes nails look bad.
--Provide simple alternatives to nail biting. When you find your child biting, suggest a different, age-appropriate activity.
--Avoid negativity. Children can respond to punishment or criticism by nail biting to spite parents.
--Embrace positive reinforcement. Designate a fun activity after a day without biting, and a larger reward for a week without biting.
--Get your child involved in the process. Ask him his opinion on the best way to quit.
--Make use of physical barriers. Use bitter-tasting nail polish during the day or bandages or socks on the hands at night to remind your child not to bite.
--Be patient. Habits don’t appear overnight, nor do they disappear quickly. Be prepared to handle relapses calmly.

Regardless of age, nail biting is often a stress-induced activity. Pay attention to your patterns or your child’s patterns. If nail biting regularly occurs in response to a stressful situation, it’s more useful to focus on removing or dealing with the stressor.

No matter what the underlying cause, nail biting is a habit best avoided or overcome. Aside from a set of beautiful nails, a recovered biter enjoys a hearty sense of accomplishment. And of course we at Weiss Orthodontics care about both your teeth and your happiness, so let us know if we can help you break these biting habits!

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