School of Philosophy, Psychology and Language Sciences, University of Edinburgh, 7 George Square, Edinburgh, UK.
Glasgow Dental School, School of Medicine, Dentistry and Nursing, College of MVLS, University of Glasgow, 378 Sauchiehall Street, Glasgow, UK.
BMC Oral Health. 2018 Nov 21;18(1):191. doi: 10.1186/s12903-018-0650-z.
Link workers (lay health workers, health support workers) based in the community provide additional support to individuals and families to facilitate engagement with primary care and other services and resources. This additional support aims to tackle the wider socio-economic determinants of health that lead to inequalities. To date, there is no clear evidence of the effectiveness of these programmes. This study evaluates the effectiveness of Dental Health Support Workers (DHSW) at linking targeted families with young children to primary care dental practices. The DHSW role is one component of Childsmile, the national oral health improvement programme in Scotland.
A quasi-experimental approach captured the natural variation in the rollout of the DHSW intervention across Scotland in a cohort of children born between 2010 and 2013. Survival analysis explored "time to attendance" at primary care dental practice. Cox's regression models compared attendance rates and time until first attendance between those families who received support from the DHSW and those who did not.
The cohort consisted of 35236 children. Thirty-three percent of the cohort (n = 11495) were considered to require additional support from a DHSW. Of these, 44% (5087) received that support. These families were more likely to attend a dental practice (Hazard Ratio [95% Confidence Interval] =1.87 [1.8 to 1.9]) and, on average, did so 9 months earlier (median time until first attendance: 8.8 months versus 17.8 months), compared to families not receiving additional support.
Link workers (DHSW) within the Childsmile programme are effective at linking targeted children to primary care dental services and, most notably, at a younger age for prevention. This is the first study of its kind to evaluate the effectiveness of link-worker programmes using a robust quasi-experimental design on three, population-wide, linked datasets. These results will inform future health programmes which aim to improve health and reduce inequalities by reaching and supporting families from more disadvantaged backgrounds.
社区中的联络工作者(初级卫生保健工作者、健康支持工作者)为个人和家庭提供额外的支持,以促进他们与初级保健和其他服务和资源的接触。这种额外的支持旨在解决导致不平等的更广泛的社会经济决定因素。迄今为止,尚无这些计划有效性的明确证据。本研究评估了牙科健康支持工作者(DHSW)在将有针对性的家庭与有年幼子女的家庭联系到初级保健牙科实践中的效果。DHSW 的角色是苏格兰国家口腔健康改善计划 Childsmile 的一个组成部分。
准实验方法利用 DHSW 干预措施在苏格兰各地推出的自然变化,对 2010 年至 2013 年期间出生的一组儿童进行了研究。生存分析探讨了“就诊时间”到初级保健牙科实践的时间。Cox 回归模型比较了接受 DHSW 支持和未接受 DHSW 支持的家庭的就诊率和首次就诊时间。
该队列包括 35236 名儿童。该队列中有 33%(n=11495)被认为需要 DHSW 的额外支持。其中,44%(5087)接受了支持。与未接受额外支持的家庭相比,这些家庭更有可能去看牙医(危险比[95%置信区间]=1.87[1.8 至 1.9]),平均提前 9 个月就诊(首次就诊的中位数时间:8.8 个月对 17.8 个月)。
Childsmile 计划中的联络工作者(DHSW)在将目标儿童与初级保健牙科服务联系起来方面非常有效,尤其是在更年轻的时候进行预防。这是第一项使用稳健的准实验设计,对三个基于人群的、相互关联的数据集进行的关于联络工作者计划有效性的研究。这些结果将为旨在通过接触和支持来自较不利背景的家庭来改善健康和减少不平等的未来健康计划提供信息。