Let Kids Gorge on Halloween Candy, Dentists Say
  There's no reason to be spooked. Dentists aren't hoping to make money on the inevitable windfall of rotting teeth. The fact is, if you're going to eat candy, gorging is far better for your teeth than rationing.
  Slowly snacking on Halloween candy  every few hours, day after day, keeps your teeth bathed in  enamel-corroding acid, the byproduct of bacteria feeding on sugar and  other carbohydrates in your mouth. This leads to dental caries, or  cavities.
  For example, as far as oral hygiene goes, it is better to eat five  candy bars at once than to eat one every few hours. In the first  scenario, acid will build up in your mouth, but your saliva will  naturally neutralize this over the course of an hour or so. And then  that acid is gone. In the second scenario, you are constantly exposing  your teeth to acid throughout the day, too much for saliva to wash away.
  Gorging also is better, because it is more likely to be followed by  tooth-brushing. People, and especially children, are less likely to  brush their teeth after every candy bar, particularly if they aren't at  home.
  Potato chips are worse
  Candy is not necessarily the worst thing for your teeth, anyway. The factors that really lead to cavities  are stickiness and acidity. Potato chips and pretzels, for example, are  worse offenders than chocolate, because these cooked carbohydrates  cling to your teeth — giving mouth bacteria something to feast on longer  and thus generating more acid.
  Although it sounds counterintuitive, substituting chocolate for  so-called healthier chips or fruit chews is actually worse for the  teeth.
Among candy, the sticky and sour kinds are the worst for your teeth.  Those gummies that stay lodged in a molar till Thanksgiving are nothing  but trouble. Sour candy tends to have more acid, so sour-tasting gummies  are a double-whammy.  Sugar high and low
  Of course, all this "good news" about candy only applies to oral  health. Aside from the generous 2 percent of the recommended daily  allowance of iron in a Kit Kat bar, and 1 percent vitamin A, candy is  largely devoid of nutrients and constitutes empty calories. The  aforementioned Kit Kat contains more than 200 calories per serving,  twice the calories found in a large apple.
  Some children are so obese that they suffer from pre-diabetes or even  full-fledged type 2 diabetes, which traditionally only has affected  adults. These children shouldn't be eating any candy.
  Oral health is nothing to neglect, though. Tooth decay  and gum disease are major public health problems, associated with poor  digestion, heart attacks, strokes and cancers, stemming from  inflammation and subsequent infections.
  If you think candy is the only unhealthy element of Halloween, consider  this: Halloween is one of the top three major nights for dangerous  binge drinking, along with New Year's Eve and St. Patrick's Day,  according to an article published last year in the Journal of American  College Health.
  On a positive note, 10 beers will wash away even the most stubborn gummies.
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