Martignon Stefania, Guarnizo-Herreño Carol C, Franco-Cortés Angela Maria, García-Zapata Lina Maria, Ochoa-Acosta Emilia Maria, Restrepo-Pérez Luis Fernando, Arango Maria Cristina, Cerezo María Del Pilar, Cortes Andrea
Universidad El Bosque, Caries Research Unit - Unica, Research Department, Bogotá, Colombia.
Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Facultad de Odontología, Departamento de Salud Colectiva, Bogotá, Colombia.
Braz Oral Res. 2024 Dec 9;38:e126. doi: 10.1590/1807-3107bor-2024.vol38.0126. eCollection 2024.
The Colombian Chapter of the Alliance-for-a-Cavity-Free-Future (Col-ACFF) has been conducting a health promotion and caries prevention program among young children in four vulnerable Colombian municipalities (baseline data from 2012-2014). This study aimed to quantify socioeconomic inequalities in early childhood caries (ECC) and examine the potential role of daily fluoride-toothpaste use, previous-year dental-care visit, and nutrition/diet-related aspects. The study sample included 1344 children aged 1-5 years. Inequalities in the age-standardized prevalence rates of and mean number of tooth surfaces affected by moderate/extensive (dME) and initial (dIME) caries (defined using the ICDAS-merged-epi criteria) by household income and level of education were examined using the relative index of inequality (RII) and the slope index of inequality (SII). Approximately one-third of the children included in this study exhibited dME, while 84% exhibited dIME. The majority of outcomes exhibited social gradients, and significant relative (RII) and absolute (SII) inequalities in ECC were observed. The SII estimate indicated an absolute difference of 12.4% in the prevalence of moderate/extensive carious lesions among children living in households with the lowest compared to the highest education levels [SII: 12.4; 95% confidence interval (CI): 2.7-22.1]. These children were also 6.7 times more likely to exhibit dIME compared to those living in households with higher levels of education (SII:6.73 95% CI: 4.18-9.29). Daily use of fluoride toothpastes, dental care visits in the previous year, and nutrition/diet-related factors played a limited role in ECC inequalities. In conclusion, significant ECC inequalities were observed in these vulnerable populations, highlighting the importance of upstream and downstream interventions that raise awareness among stakeholders and improve community- and individual-based practices to address this.
“无龋未来联盟”哥伦比亚分会(Col - ACFF)一直在哥伦比亚四个脆弱城市的幼儿中开展健康促进和龋齿预防项目(2012 - 2014年的基线数据)。本研究旨在量化幼儿龋齿(ECC)中的社会经济不平等,并研究每日使用含氟牙膏、上一年的牙科护理就诊以及营养/饮食相关方面的潜在作用。研究样本包括1344名1 - 5岁的儿童。使用不平等相对指数(RII)和不平等斜率指数(SII),研究了按家庭收入和教育水平划分的中度/重度(dME)和初期(dIME)龋齿(使用ICDAS合并流行病标准定义)的年龄标准化患病率及受影响牙面平均数量的不平等情况。本研究中约三分之一的儿童患有dME,而84%的儿童患有dIME。大多数结果呈现出社会梯度,并且在ECC中观察到了显著的相对(RII)和绝对(SII)不平等。SII估计表明,与受教育程度最高的家庭相比,受教育程度最低的家庭中儿童患中度/重度龋损的患病率绝对差异为12.4%[SII:12.4;95%置信区间(CI):2.7 - 22.1]。与生活在教育水平较高家庭的儿童相比,这些儿童患dIME的可能性也要高出6.7倍(SII:6.73;95%CI:4.18 - 9.29)。每日使用含氟牙膏、上一年的牙科护理就诊以及营养/饮食相关因素在ECC不平等中作用有限。总之,在这些脆弱人群中观察到了显著的ECC不平等,这凸显了上游和下游干预措施的重要性,这些措施可提高利益相关者的认识,并改善基于社区和个人的做法以解决这一问题。