Oral Health Prev Dent. 2024 Nov 7;22:557-566. doi: 10.3290/j.ohpd.b5816441.
Focusing on immigrant parents with children aged 0-6 months, this study assessed whether awareness of and attitudes towards restricting children's sugar consumption vary according to family sociodemographic background and parents' oral-health-related behaviours.
A cross-sectional study was conducted including immigrant parents attending child public health centers for vaccination of their children. The study included parents born in Asia, Africa, South America, Central America and Eastern Europe. Parents from Western Europe and North America were included if they were partners of the above-mentioned participants. Cross-tabulation and multiple variable logistic regression were used to assess associations of parental knowledge and attitudes with their child's sugar intake and sociodemographic characteristics.
Overall, response rate was 72.6%. A total of 345 parents completed personal, structured interviews during their visit to the health centers. Attitudes and knowledge, but not indulgence, related to children's sugar restriction were sociodemographically unequally distributed among immigrant parents. Employed mothers, mothers with immigrant background from North America or Western Europe as well as parents with less frequent own sugar intake were more likely to confirm positive attitudes towards restricting children's sugar snacking. The corresponding odds ratios were OR=1.8 (95% CI 1.1-3.1) and OR=6.6 (95% CI 2.3-18.9). Employed mothers and parents having received dental care information were more likely than their counterparts to possess good oral-health-related knowledge.
Parents from sociodemographically disadvantaged backgrounds were less inclined to express positive attitudes and demonstrate sufficient knowledge regarding the limitation of their children's sugar snacking. Culturally adapted oral health intervention programs should be implemented for immigrants, with special reference to children's dietary habits.
本研究聚焦于有 0-6 月龄子女的移民父母,评估其对限制儿童糖摄入量的认知和态度是否因家庭社会人口背景和父母口腔健康相关行为而异。
本研究为横断面研究,纳入在儿童公共卫生中心为子女接种疫苗的移民父母。研究对象包括出生于亚洲、非洲、南美洲、中美洲和东欧的移民父母。如果父母一方来自上述地区,而另一方来自西欧或北美,则将其纳入研究。交叉表和多变量逻辑回归用于评估父母的知识和态度与其子女的糖摄入量和社会人口学特征之间的关联。
总体而言,应答率为 72.6%。共有 345 名父母在前往卫生中心就诊期间完成了个人结构化访谈。对儿童糖限制的态度和知识,但不是放纵程度,在移民父母中存在社会人口学差异。就业母亲、来自北美或西欧的移民背景母亲以及自身糖摄入量较少的父母更有可能对限制儿童糖零食持积极态度。相应的优势比为 OR=1.8(95%CI 1.1-3.1)和 OR=6.6(95%CI 2.3-18.9)。接受过口腔保健信息的就业母亲和父母更有可能拥有良好的口腔健康相关知识。
社会人口学背景处于劣势的父母对限制子女糖零食摄入的态度不积极,知识也不足。应针对移民实施文化适应的口腔健康干预计划,特别关注儿童的饮食习惯。