Flood Shannon, Asplund Karin, Hoffman Benjamin, Nye Allison, Zuckerman Katharine E
School of Medicine, Oregon Health and Science University, Portland, Ore.
School of Medicine, Oregon Health and Science University, Portland, Ore.
Acad Pediatr. 2017 Apr;17(3):316-322. doi: 10.1016/j.acap.2016.11.009. Epub 2016 Nov 19.
To prevent early childhood caries, the American Dental Association recommends oral fluoride supplementation for children in communities lacking water fluoridation who are at high caries risk. However, patient adherence to oral fluoride supplementation has not been studied in this population. This study assessed adherence to oral fluoride and barriers to adherence in a community lacking water fluoridation.
A self-administered survey was completed in a systematic sample of 209 parents of children aged 6 months to 4 years, during a primary care visit in an urban academic medical center. Participants reported frequency of administering oral fluoride to their children, as well as agreement or disagreement with proposed barriers to supplementation. Bivariate and multivariate analyses were used to assess adherence with oral supplementation and the association of barriers to supplementation and child receipt of fluoride on the day before.
More than half of parents either had not or did not know if their child had received fluoride on the day before. Approximately 1 in 4 of parents had given fluoride in 0 of the previous 7 days. Difficulty remembering to give fluoride and agreeing that the child does not need extra fluoride were associated with not receiving fluoride on the day before.
Adherence to oral fluoride supplementation in the primary care setting is low. Difficulty remembering to give fluoride daily is the greatest barrier to adherence. Further research on interventions to reduce common barriers is needed to increase fluoride administration and reduce early childhood caries in communities lacking water fluoridation.
为预防幼儿龋齿,美国牙科协会建议,在缺乏水氟化的社区中,对龋齿高危儿童进行口服氟补充。然而,尚未对该人群中患者口服氟补充的依从性进行研究。本研究评估了在一个缺乏水氟化的社区中口服氟的依从性及依从性障碍。
在一家城市学术医疗中心的初级保健就诊期间,对209名6个月至4岁儿童的父母进行系统抽样,完成一份自我管理的调查问卷。参与者报告给孩子服用口服氟的频率,以及对补充氟的建议障碍的同意或不同意情况。采用双变量和多变量分析来评估口服补充的依从性,以及补充障碍与前一天儿童氟摄入之间的关联。
超过一半的父母不知道他们的孩子前一天是否服用了氟。约四分之一的父母在前7天中0天给孩子服用过氟。难以记住给孩子服用氟以及认为孩子不需要额外补充氟与前一天未摄入氟有关。
在初级保健环境中,口服氟补充的依从性较低。难以记住每天给孩子服用氟是依从性的最大障碍。需要进一步研究减少常见障碍的干预措施,以增加氟的摄入并减少缺乏水氟化社区中的幼儿龋齿。