School of Dentistry, University of Leeds, Clarendon Way, Leeds, LS2 9JT, UK.
Bradford Community Dental Service, Bradford District Care NHS Trust, Bradford, UK.
BMC Oral Health. 2021 Apr 26;21(1):210. doi: 10.1186/s12903-021-01560-w.
Tooth decay has a significant impact on children, their families and wider society. The dental consultation provides an opportunity to prevent tooth decay by engaging in an effective oral health conversation with parents and children. However, there is limited literature which explores how these oral health conversations are delivered, received, and understood.
To explore the common facilitators of delivering oral health advice from dental teams, parents' and children's experiences, to identify and inform practical recommendations for clinical practice.
The current paper used a qualitative supplementary analysis to reanalyse data of existing published studies by applying a different research question. Qualitative focus groups were undertaken following a semi-structured interview guide with 27 dental team members (dentists, dental nurses, practice managers and receptionists), 37 parents and 120 children (aged 7-10 years old) in the northern region of England. Thematic analysis informed the identification of themes and aggregation of findings.
Three overarching themes were developed: (1) An engaging and personalised dental visit for parents and children; (2) Dental teams, parents and children working collaboratively to improve oral health habits; and (3) Recommending appropriate oral health products. Many parents and children had little recollection of any preventive oral health conversations when visiting the dentist. Practical solutions were identified by different stakeholders to facilitate three-way, personalised, non-judgemental and supportive oral health conversations. Adopting these innovative approaches will help to enable parents and their children to adopt and maintain appropriate oral health behaviours.
Understanding the context and triangulating the experiences of stakeholders involved in preventive oral health conversations for young children is an essential step in co-designing a complex oral health intervention. This study has provided recommendations for dental practices and wider paediatric health care services. Furthermore, the findings have informed the design of a complex oral health intervention called "Strong Teeth".
龋齿对儿童、他们的家庭和更广泛的社会都有重大影响。牙科咨询提供了一个机会,可以通过与父母和儿童进行有效的口腔健康对话来预防龋齿。然而,关于这些口腔健康对话如何进行、被接受和理解的文献有限。
探讨牙科团队向家长和儿童提供口腔健康建议的常见促进因素,了解家长和儿童的经验,为临床实践提供实用建议。
本研究采用定性补充分析,通过应用不同的研究问题重新分析了现有发表研究的数据。在英格兰北部地区,对 27 名牙科团队成员(牙医、牙科护士、诊所经理和接待员)、37 名家长和 120 名 7-10 岁儿童进行了定性焦点小组,使用半结构化访谈指南进行。主题分析为主题的识别和研究结果的聚合提供了信息。
确定了三个总体主题:(1)为家长和儿童提供一个有吸引力和个性化的牙科就诊体验;(2)牙科团队、家长和儿童共同努力改善口腔健康习惯;(3)推荐合适的口腔健康产品。许多家长和儿童在看牙医时几乎不记得有任何预防性口腔健康对话。不同利益相关者确定了实用的解决方案,以促进三方、个性化、非评判性和支持性的口腔健康对话。采用这些创新方法将有助于使父母和他们的孩子能够采用并维持适当的口腔健康行为。
了解参与儿童预防性口腔健康对话的利益相关者的背景和三角关系是共同设计复杂口腔健康干预措施的重要步骤。本研究为牙科诊所和更广泛的儿科保健服务提供了建议。此外,研究结果还为一项名为“Strong Teeth”的复杂口腔健康干预措施的设计提供了信息。