Vamos Cheryl A, Thompson Erika L, Avendano Maryouri, Daley Ellen M, Quinonez Rocio B, Boggess Kim
Department of Community and Family Health, College of Public Health, University of South Florida, Tampa, FL, USA.
Department of Pediatric Dentistry, School of Dentistry, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, USA.
Community Dent Oral Epidemiol. 2015 Oct;43(5):385-96. doi: 10.1111/cdoe.12167. Epub 2015 May 8.
Maternal oral disease during pregnancy is a significant public health issue due to its prevalence and lifecourse connections with adverse pregnancy/birth outcomes, early childhood caries, and chronic diseases. Although both medical and dental professional organizations have discipline-specific and co-endorsed guidelines, whether interventions exist that translate oral health evidence into practice remains unknown. Thus, we conducted a systematic review to examine the range, scope and impact of existing oral health promotion interventions during pregnancy.
Search terms related to oral health, health promotion, and pregnancy produced 7754 articles published before March 2013 from five search engines.
(i) intervention-based; (ii) quasi-experimental, experimental, or pretest/post-test design; (iii) pregnant women participants; (iv) outcomes including oral health knowledge, attitudes, and/or behaviors; (v) ≥5 participants; (vi) peer-review publication; and (vii) English language.
All interventions (n = 7) were delivered in prenatal care settings and focused on education. Modalities varied, including the use of oral instruction and audiovisual presentations, in both individual and group formats; however, content was directed toward infant oral health. Few studies specifically addressed prenatal oral health guidelines. Primary outcomes measured included knowledge, beliefs, attitudes, self-efficacy and oral hygiene, and health-seeking behaviors. All but one study showed significant improvement in one of these outcomes postintervention.
Few oral health interventions among pregnant women addressed oral-related symptoms, hygiene behaviors, and potential oral-systemic implications specific to mothers. Subsequently, more theory- and evidence-based interventions addressing current prenatal oral health guidelines using rigorous designs are needed to improve oral and systemic health for both women and their offspring.
孕期母亲口腔疾病是一个重大的公共卫生问题,因为其患病率以及与不良妊娠/分娩结局、幼儿龋齿和慢性病的生命历程关联。尽管医学和牙科专业组织都有各自学科特定且共同认可的指南,但是否存在将口腔健康证据转化为实践的干预措施仍不明确。因此,我们进行了一项系统综述,以研究孕期现有口腔健康促进干预措施的范围、规模和影响。
与口腔健康、健康促进和妊娠相关的检索词从五个搜索引擎中检索出了2013年3月之前发表的7754篇文章。
(i)基于干预;(ii)准实验、实验或前测/后测设计;(iii)孕妇参与者;(iv)结局包括口腔健康知识、态度和/或行为;(v)≥5名参与者;(vi)同行评审出版物;以及(vii)英语语言。
所有干预措施(n = 7)均在产前护理环境中实施,且侧重于教育。方式各不相同,包括以个体和小组形式使用口头指导和视听演示;然而,内容针对的是婴儿口腔健康。很少有研究专门涉及产前口腔健康指南。测量的主要结局包括知识、信念、态度、自我效能和口腔卫生以及寻求健康行为。除一项研究外,所有研究均表明干预后这些结局中的一项有显著改善。
孕妇中的口腔健康干预措施很少涉及与口腔相关的症状、卫生行为以及母亲特有的潜在口腔 - 全身影响。随后,需要更多基于理论和证据的干预措施,采用严谨的设计来遵循当前的产前口腔健康指南,以改善妇女及其后代的口腔和全身健康。