Edomwonyi Augustine Ikponmwosa, Adeniyi Abiola Adetokunbo, Adedigba Michael A, Oyapero Afolabi
Department of Preventive Dentistry, University of Medical Sciences, Ondo State, Nigeria.
Department of Preventive Dentistry, Lagos State University College of Medicine, Ikeja, Lagos, Nigeria.
J Family Med Prim Care. 2020 Jun 30;9(6):2806-2813. doi: 10.4103/jfmpc.jfmpc_1269_19. eCollection 2020 Jun.
Common oral diseases are preventable and if detected early are reversible and schools provide a setting in which the oral health behavior of pupils can be influenced. We aimed to assess the effectiveness of using teachers in place of oral health professionals to deliver oral health education (OHE) in public secondary schools in Lagos State.
This quasi-experimental study was conducted in four phases from September 2016-April 2017. A multistage sampling method was adopted to enlist the research participants from four enlisted schools, which were randomly assigned into two groups. Trained dentists delivered OHE in the first group of schools while trained teachers did in the second group and the impact of the intervention was assessed over six months. values for significant differences were set at 0.05.
At the 3 months evaluation, the mean oral health knowledge (OHK) scores were higher among pupils in the Teachers Intervention Schools (TIS) (71.3 ± 19.3) than that in the Dentist Intervention Schools (DIS) (61.3 ± 17.7) ( = 0.023). Subsequent evaluation sessions from baseline revealed a gradual increase in the proportion of pupils with positive oral health attitude scores; with a higher proportion of pupils in the DIS (34.5%) compared to the TIS (34.0%) at 6 months assessment time. At 6 months evaluation, the proportion of pupils with poor oral health practices decreased in both groups of schools ( = 0.104).
The proportion of pupils with good OHK was higher in the TIS at post-intervention periods; this difference was statistically significant at 3 months. This result suggests that teachers are as effective as dentists in delivering OHE.
常见口腔疾病是可预防的,若早期发现则可逆转,而学校提供了一个能够影响学生口腔健康行为的环境。我们旨在评估在拉各斯州的公立中学中,利用教师代替口腔健康专业人员开展口腔健康教育(OHE)的效果。
这项准实验研究于2016年9月至2017年4月分四个阶段进行。采用多阶段抽样方法从四所入选学校招募研究参与者,这些学校被随机分为两组。在第一组学校中,由经过培训的牙医开展口腔健康教育,而在第二组学校中则由经过培训的教师开展,对干预措施的影响进行了为期六个月的评估。设定显著差异的P值为0.05。
在3个月的评估中,教师干预学校(TIS)学生的平均口腔健康知识(OHK)得分(71.3±19.3)高于牙医干预学校(DIS)的学生(61.3±17.7)(P = 0.023)。从基线开始的后续评估显示,口腔健康态度得分呈阳性的学生比例逐渐增加;在6个月评估时,DIS中的学生比例(34.5%)高于TIS中的学生比例(34.0%)。在6个月的评估中,两组学校中口腔健康习惯较差的学生比例均有所下降(P = 0.104)。
干预后期,TIS中口腔健康知识良好的学生比例较高;这一差异在3个月时具有统计学意义。这一结果表明,教师在开展口腔健康教育方面与牙医同样有效。