Ammar Idlibi Creates New Healthy Sugar-Free Sweet Drink for Toddlers


Posted August 2, 2016 by ammarldlibi

Ammar Idlibi, a Connecticut-based pediatric dentist, has a goal of helping children maintain oral health. He invented a new sweet drink that is sugar-free and healthier for children than other drinks available on the market.

 
Ammar Idlibi is a pediatric dentist from Connecticut with over twenty years of experience in dentistry. He received his first dental degree from Al-Ba'ath University Faculty of Dentistry, Hama, Syria in 1989. Idlibi then moved to the US and continued his education at Tufts University School of Dental Medicine in Boston, Massachusetts. After completing his studies at Tufts and receiving a Certificate in Pediatric Dentistry, Idlibi became a fellow at the University of Connecticut School of Dental Medicine in Farmington, Connecticut.

Having completed the fellowship, Idlibi moved to his home country of Syria, where he opened a private practice. Soon after that, he received a job offer to join an elite American multi-specialty practice in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. He accepted the offer and spent three years working in Riyadh before permanently moving back to the United States in 2000.

Having extensive international experience, Dr. Idlibi noticed that supermarket shelves all over the world have plenty of flavored waters full of sugar, yet when it comes to alternatives for children, the options are far and few in between.

This led Dr. Idlibi on a quest to develop a new, better beverage to help promote oral health for young children. Ammar Idlibi has spent over a year researching and creating the beverage that he named Healthy Sweet. The drink is completely sugar-free. Ammar Idlibi created the drink specifically for toddlers, even though adults might enjoy it, too.

The drink consists of purified water, milk proteins, and a natural sweetener. The sweetener is known for its antibacterial effects and preventing tooth decay. The drink contains no added preservatives, no artificial colors, and no artificial flavors.

Ammar Idlibi claims that juices and milk aren’t the problem when it comes to the oral health of children. What matters is when and how often kids drink the fluids.

"If you brush your teeth right after, that is fine, but if kids walk around with a sippy cup all day and constantly have access to it or go to bed with a bottle, that's where we get children with rampant tooth decay," says Ammar Idlibi. "When you have it (milk or juice) with a meal, then your chewing produces extra saliva that buffers the acidity of the beverage and you don't get as much of a negative effect. Between meals, your mouth is dryer and your teeth are more vulnerable."

For More Information Visit Here - https://www.crunchbase.com/person/ammar-idlibi
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Issued By Pz Media Inc
Country United States
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Last Updated August 2, 2016