In clinical practice, many children visit the clinic for dental problems. It is common to see that the child cries a lot, the parents sweat a lot, and finally put on an all-out fight, but still cannot be successfully treated. These parents are often envious of the children who cooperate very well. I hope to discuss with the parents of these children about the problems they encounter in the clinic (some of which should not only apply to dental care), in the hope of helping. First of all, without having had the direct and indirect experience that dental visits are scary, children think that going to the dentist is fun: the liftable treatment chair, the sliding doctor’s chair, the triple-use gun that can squirt water and air, and the bottles and jars are all fun things to do. So, parents should not scare their children with doctors using dentists with extractions in general, but form an understanding for them that going to the dentist is a normal thing, just like shopping is a daily necessity. Second, the dental process, treat the child to be patient, but the attitude should be firm, can not easily promise the child not to use a certain instrument, to tell the child that treatment is necessary, mom and dad do not understand, to listen to the doctor’s words, the doctor used instruments are necessary; at the same time, the appropriate time to encourage the child, do not rush, the child is really difficult to cooperate with the treatment can be divided, mainly to eliminate the child’s fear of psychology. Third, in the treatment process, do not repeatedly ask questions that tend to trigger the child’s anxiety, do not question the child’s tolerance before treatment; if the parents pass some kind of bad emotion to the child, it is difficult for the doctor to communicate with the child again, and it is simply impossible to treat. For example, when I met a child with maxillary dentition in my clinic, the parents heard that the dentition needed to be extracted and immediately said, “That can’t be done, I heard that tooth extraction can kill people. In this case, the treatment was not possible at all. I have a colleague who did a great job. He is an internist, and his 6-year-old son was so scared when he saw the tooth that he brought him to the office to familiarize himself with the situation a few times, and then told him very firmly that treatment was necessary and could wait for you for a week. When he got home, he showed the child some videos related to dental visits from the internet and kept encouraging the child next to him when he was treated again. The child persisted very well and the treatment went very well. Fourth, and also a very critical point, the child’s dental disease should be treated early, if the development of acute pulpitis, the kind of all-night pain, the child will naturally be very afraid, it is difficult to cooperate in the treatment.