Recognizing a Dental Emergency in Someone Else: What to Do When You're the Bystander


What to Do When Someone Near You Has a Dental Emergency
You're coaching your kid's soccer game when a player takes a ball to the face and a tooth goes flying. You're at a family dinner and an elderly relative starts clutching their jaw, face visibly swelling. You're at work when a colleague comes to you pale and clearly in significant dental pain. You're the bystander — the person there at the moment of the dental emergency who has to figure out what to do.
Knowing what to do in those first critical minutes — before professional help arrives or before you get the person to a dental office — can make a genuinely significant difference in the outcome of their dental emergency.
Step 1: Stay Calm and Assess the Situation
Your calm is contagious. A person in dental pain or experiencing a traumatic dental injury is likely scared, in pain, and possibly in shock. Your demeanor sets the tone. Take a breath, speak in a measured tone, and systematically assess what you're dealing with.
Ask: What happened? Where does it hurt? Is a tooth missing? Is there significant bleeding? Is there any swelling? Can they breathe normally? Can they swallow? These questions help you categorize the emergency.
Step 2: Identify the Level of Emergency
Call 911 or Go to the ER Immediately If:
- There is difficulty breathing or swallowing (may indicate airway-threatening infection or soft tissue swelling)
- There is massive, uncontrolled oral bleeding that you cannot manage with pressure
- The person lost consciousness at any point — even briefly — following dental trauma (possible concussion)
- There is a suspected fracture of the jaw (person cannot close their mouth normally, jaw appears deviated)
- The person is rapidly developing neck swelling alongside dental pain
- The person appears to be in septic shock: fever, confusion, rapid breathing, rapid heart rate alongside dental emergency
Call American Urgent Dental Immediately If:
- A tooth has been completely knocked out (30-minute window for reimplantation)
- There is significant dental trauma without the above life-threatening signs
- There is facial swelling associated with tooth pain (but no breathing/swallowing compromise)
- There is severe, unmanaged dental pain
- There is significant oral bleeding manageable with pressure
Step 3: Manage a Knocked-Out Tooth (If Applicable)
If a tooth has been completely knocked out, act immediately:
- Look for the tooth on the ground/surface — find it now while assessing the situation
- Pick it up by the crown (white part) only — do not touch the root
- If dirty: rinse very gently in milk or clean water — do not scrub
- If the person is conscious, cooperative, and not a young child: attempt to reinsert the tooth into the socket
- If not possible to reinsert: place the tooth in a cup of milk, in the person's saliva (between their cheek and gum if they're conscious and safe), or in a Save-A-Tooth kit
- Call American Urgent Dental immediately — Alexandria: 703-214-9143 / Greenbelt: 240-241-0342
⚠️ Warning: For a child under approximately age 7, do NOT attempt to reinsert the tooth — it may be a baby tooth, and reimplanting baby teeth can damage the developing permanent tooth beneath it. Preserve the tooth and call us — we'll determine the right course of action.
Step 4: Manage Oral Bleeding
For oral bleeding from dental trauma:
- Fold a clean cloth or multiple layers of gauze into a firm pad
- Place the pad directly on the bleeding area
- Have the person bite down firmly on the pad, or hold it in place with your fingers if they cannot cooperate
- Maintain constant, firm pressure for 30–45 minutes without removing the pad to check
- Sit the person upright — do not lie them down
- Apply a cold pack to the outside of the face if available
Step 5: Document What Happened
If you have a moment after managing the immediate emergency, note:
- The time the injury occurred or the time you found the person in pain
- Exactly what happened (fall from what height, what kind of impact, etc.)
- Whether the person lost consciousness even briefly
- Any other injuries visible
- Medications the person takes if you know them
- Their allergies if known
This information is valuable when you arrive at American Urgent Dental or the ER and are asked to describe the situation.
Dental Emergency Kits: What Workplaces and Schools Should Have
Schools, sports clubs, and workplaces benefit from having basic dental emergency supplies on hand:
- Save-A-Tooth or Hank's Balanced Salt Solution kit
- Sterile gauze (multiple packs)
- Instant cold pack
- Dental wax
- Ibuprofen and acetaminophen (for adults)
- Printed reference card with emergency dental protocols
- American Urgent Dental's number: Alexandria 703-214-9143 / Greenbelt 240-241-0342
Coaches, athletic trainers, school nurses, and workplace first aid personnel should also consider familiarizing themselves with the tooth reimplantation protocol — it's the one dental emergency where bystander action in the first 5 minutes can make the difference between a tooth being saved and being lost.
Get Same-Day Emergency Dental Care
American Urgent Dental — two convenient locations serving Northern Virginia and the Greater DC Metro area.
Alexandria, VA: 2616 Sherwood Hall Lane Ste 403, Alexandria, VA 22306 | 703-214-9143
Greenbelt, MD: 7861 Belle Point Drive, Greenbelt, MD 20770 | 240-241-0342
📧 contact@americanurgentdental.com | 🌐 www.americanurgentdental.com
