Jamieson Lisa, Smithers Lisa, Hedges Joanne, Parker Eleanor, Mills Helen, Kapellas Kostas, Lawrence Herenia P, Broughton John R, Ju Xiangqun
Adelaide Dental School, University of Adelaide, Australia.
School of Public Health, University of Adelaide, Australia.
EClinicalMedicine. 2018 Jul 23;1:43-50. doi: 10.1016/j.eclinm.2018.05.001. eCollection 2018 Jul.
Dental disease has far-reaching impacts on child health and wellbeing. We worked with Aboriginal Australian communities to develop a multifaceted oral health promotion initiative to reduce children's experience of dental disease at age 2 years.
This was a single-blind, parallel-arm, randomised controlled trial. Participants were recruited from health service providers across South Australia. Women pregnant with an Aboriginal child were eligible. The intervention comprised: (1) provision of dental care to mothers during pregnancy; (2) application of fluoride varnish to teeth of children at ages 6, 12 and 18 months; (3) motivational interviewing delivered in conjunction with; (4) anticipatory guidance. The primary outcome was untreated dental decay as assessed by the number of teeth with cavitated and non-cavitated carious lesions (mean dt) at child age 24 months. Analyses followed intention-to-treat principles. The RCT was registered with the Australian and New Zealand Clinical Trial Registry, ACTRN12611000111976.
Women (n = 448) were recruited from February 2011 to May 2012, resulting in 223 children in the treatment group and 225 in the control. Mean dt at age two years was 0.62 (95% CI 0.59 to 0.65) for the intervention group and 0.89 (95% CI 0.85 to 0.92) for the control group (mean difference - 0.27 (95% CI - 0.31, - 0.22)).
A culturally-appropriate intervention at four time-points from pregnancy through to 18-months resulted in improvements in the oral health of Aboriginal children. Further consultation with Aboriginal communities is essential for understanding how to best sustain these oral health improvements for young Aboriginal children.
牙科疾病对儿童健康和幸福有着深远影响。我们与澳大利亚原住民社区合作,制定了一项多方面的口腔健康促进倡议,以减少2岁儿童患牙科疾病的情况。
这是一项单盲、平行组、随机对照试验。参与者从南澳大利亚的医疗服务提供者中招募。怀有原住民孩子的妇女符合条件。干预措施包括:(1)在孕期为母亲提供牙科护理;(2)在儿童6个月、12个月和18个月时为其牙齿涂抹氟化物漆;(3)结合动机性访谈;(4)前瞻性指导。主要结局是通过24个月大儿童有龋洞和无龋洞龋损的牙齿数量(平均dt)评估的未经治疗的龋齿情况。分析遵循意向性分析原则。该随机对照试验已在澳大利亚和新西兰临床试验注册中心注册,注册号为ACTRN12611000111976。
2011年2月至2012年5月招募了妇女(n = 448),治疗组有223名儿童,对照组有225名儿童。干预组2岁时的平均dt为0.62(95%置信区间0.59至0.65),对照组为0.89(95%置信区间0.85至0.92)(平均差值 -0.27(95%置信区间 -0.31,-0.22))。
从孕期到18个月的四个时间点进行的适合文化背景的干预,改善了原住民儿童的口腔健康。与原住民社区进一步协商对于了解如何最好地维持这些原住民幼儿口腔健康改善情况至关重要。