The last time Elsa Natareno went to the dentist was over a year ago.

The 72-year-old nanny from Guatemala received partial dentures, a procedure that costs an average of $1,500. “I had to go on a payment plan,” Natareno said. “Medi-Cal covered the cost of some extractions, but they didn’t for the partials.”

Looking to avoid further expenses, Natareno became one the hundreds of people who have received free dental screenings, oral health education and goodie bags from The Magic Tooth Bus, a mobile dental clinic serving San Francisco’s working class communities. “I was happy to find this [event] on my cell phone,” said Natareno, who attended the April 14 dental pop-up in front of the Mission Branch Library. “I passed on this information to other people as well.”

Ixchel Lopez (left), Ashley Gomez and Cesar Gomez play with toys on a table outside the Magic Tooth Bus parked on Valencia Street in San Francisco, Calif. on April 14, 2024. Photo: Daniel Eduardo Hernandez

Staffed by volunteer UCSF dental students, the Magic Tooth Bus is one solution to reaching the city’s Latinx children and older adults, who are more likely than other ethnic groups to face barriers to dental health.

Viviana Calambas brought her young son to the April 14 mobile pop-up, which had a kid’s table full of human teeth plushies. “It’s sometimes difficult to find professionals that can really understand how to treat children,” said Calambas. Danny Do, dental student volunteer, agreed: “[Kids] like crazy, fun personalities. Getting them more familiar with a dental setting is so vital in terms of their relationships with dentistry.” 

One of the co-founders of the Magic Tooth Bus, Mylene Deano, is a registered dental assistant that used to work at a community health center. Even though the center provided dental services to underserved populations, Deano said she still saw many kids and families miss critical appointments. “Some of the factors could have been transportation, their working situation, [lack of] child care,” said Deano. “So that’s why we came up with an idea: ‘Why not bring the dental access on site?”

A crowd of Mission District residents crowd around the Magic Tooth Bus parked on Valencia Street in San Francisco, Calif. on April 14, 2024. Photo: Daniel Eduardo Hernandez

UCSF professor Benjamin Chaffee, who specializes in oral healthcare, says community outreach and education are vital to breaking barriers to dental healthcare. “Many times we think of oral health and dental care as a luxury or commodity that’s available to those who can pay for it,” said Chaffee. “And not something that’s a right that everybody deserves,” Ultimately, Chaffee says dental healths needs to be better integrated with general medical care.

In the short-term, Natareno has one message for the city’s Latinx community: “When you see these programs that come into the city, please invite more people … We shouldn’t let these services go by and we shouldn’t waste these opportunities.”

The next Magic Tooth Bus pop-up will be hosted on Saturday, June 8 at the Pop-Up Village at Southeast Community Center in San Francisco’s Bayview.