
A huge factor in child absence from school has been revealed (Picture: Getty Images)
Scientists are warning about a simple health issue causing hundreds of thousands of children to miss extra days of school.
Tooth decay and other dental issues mean pupils lose hours of valuable lesson time – with the poorest kids worst affected.
The problem has been revealed by researchers in Scotland,but they warn that the tooth fairy could be even busier in England.
Their study of over 260,000 Scottish children found that children with tooth decay missed on average five more half-days of school per year than those with healthy teeth.

Trips to the dentist are causing children to miss school (Picture: Getty Images)
Children in deprived areas miss even more school due to poor oral health
A supervised toothbrushing programme was introduced in England in 2025 (Picture: Getty Images)As a result,the researcher is calling for free school meals to be rolled out more widely across the UK.‘Free school meals should be available for every child despite personal income,’ she said.‘If you have a healthy meal,it is one time less a day that you eat sugar,biscuits or anything that’s harmful for your teeth.’Over 380,000 pupils in Scotland will be eligible for free school meals in the coming school year.Scotland also introduced a supervised toothbrushing programme,called Childsmile in nurseries and schools from 2008.Goulart acknowledged Childsmile had successfully brought down rates of tooth decay.Indeed,the latest National Dental Inspection Programme results show 73 per cent of Primary 1 children (reception in English education) have no obvious tooth decay compared with 58% in 2008,when Childsmile was introduced.A similar toothbrushing programme was only rolled out in England in March 2025.Goulart told Metro the delay in introducing a toothbrushing scheme meant the number of children missing school due to dental issues could be higher in England than across the border.
Children with more severe dental issues are at risk of missing even more lesson times (Picture: Getty Images)The government’s new scheme aims to give 600,000 children in the most deprived areas access to supervised toothbrushing.Health minister Stephen Kinnock said in March: ‘It is shocking that a third of 5-year-olds in the most deprived areas have experience of tooth decay – something we know can have a lifelong impact on their health.‘On top of this,we will reform the dental contract to get dentists providing more NHS work as we fundamentally reform the sector through our Plan for Change so it is there for patients once again.‘It’s why we’re delivering supervised toothbrushing to young children and families who are most in need of support as part of our wider plans to revive the oral health of the nation. ‘This includes providing 23 million free toothbrushes and toothpastes through our partnership with Colgate-Palmolive to reach up to 600,000 children each year.‘We’re already rolling out 700,000 extra urgent dental appointments for those who need treatment,but by focusing on prevention we can help children have the best start in life.’According to Department for Education data,the absence rate in state-funded primary schools was 5.2 percent in the 2024/25 academic year to date.Of these,3.8 per cent of these absences were authorised while 1.4 per cent were unauthorised.
Supervised toothbrushing appeared to bring down tooth decay issues in Scotland over the last 20 years (Picture: Getty Images)A Scottish Government spokesperson praised the 15% improvement in dental hygiene since the introduction of Childsmile.They told Metro: ‘Every child should be able to attend school feeling comfortable,confident,and ready to learn,and this research highlights the importance of oral improvement programmes in education settings.’United News - unews.co.za