The Jaw Epidemic: Recognition, Origins, Cures, and Prevention
Researchers from Stanford make a compelling case in this paper: human jaws are shrinking, and it's not because of our genes. The change has happened far too quickly — over centuries, not millennia — to be driven by evolution. Something about how we live is causing it.
The culprits they identify are surprisingly everyday: soft, processed diets that don't require much chewing, bottle-feeding instead of breastfeeding, and chronic mouth breathing. All of these reduce the physical forces that help a child's jaw grow to its full size. Humans are designed to have room for 32 teeth. Most of us don't.
The consequences aren't just cosmetic. A jaw that's too small means crowded teeth, impacted wisdom teeth, and a narrower airway — all connected, all stemming from the same problem. The good news is that the authors believe early intervention — helping children develop proper tongue posture, nasal breathing, and chewing habits — could prevent much of this epidemic before it starts.
Key Findings
Jaw shrinkage is far too rapid to be genetic — environmental and behavioural causes are primary.
Crooked teeth, impacted wisdom teeth, and constricted airways all stem from the same structural deficit.
Orofacial posture interventions in children may offer both clinical remedy and prevention.
Source
Added to the Evidence Hub: 20 October 2025