Foláyan Moréniké Oluwátóyìn, Ishola Adeyinka Ganiyat, Abodunrin Olunike Rebecca, Ndembi Nicaise, El Tantawi Maha
The Africa Oral Health Network (AFRONE), Alexandria University, Alexandria, Egypt.
Department of Child Dental Health, Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile Ife, Nigeria.
Front Oral Health. 2025 May 21;6:1546747. doi: 10.3389/froh.2025.1546747. eCollection 2025.
Early Childhood Caries (ECC) is a significant oral health condition that impacts children globally. This manuscript's main objective is to explore ECC's impact on children's oral health-related quality of life (OHRQoL) in Africa, and to highlight the policy and programme recommendations to eliminate untreated ECC as a public health threat in Africa. In Africa, ECC poses a significant public health challenge and has the potential to result in functional disabilities in children. A rapid review of the literature focusing on studies from Africa explored the impact of ECC on children's oral health-related quality of life. The three studies that met the eligibility criteria revealed that ECC negatively impacts multiple dimensions of life, including physical health (pain, malnutrition, chewing difficulties), psychological well-being (low self-esteem, stigma), and social functioning (peer relationships, school attendance). Advanced ECC had more pronounced effects, particularly in the symptom and psychological domains. The paper highlights the urgent need to recognise untreated ECC as a disability within public health frameworks in Africa. Policy recommendations include integrating oral health into primary healthcare systems, expanding community-based prevention programmes, incentivising the production of affordable oral health products, and developing school-based education initiatives. Strengthening oral health workforce capacity and enhancing data collection on ECC prevalence is critical for effective policy formulation and resource allocation. Recognising ECC as a potential disability underscores the need for a multi-sectoral approach to address this neglected public health priority and for prioritising actions to eliminate untreated ECC as the International Day of Persons with Disabilities (December 3) is marked.
幼儿龋齿(ECC)是一种影响全球儿童的重要口腔健康状况。本论文的主要目标是探讨ECC对非洲儿童口腔健康相关生活质量(OHRQoL)的影响,并强调消除未经治疗的ECC作为非洲公共卫生威胁的政策和项目建议。在非洲,ECC构成了重大的公共卫生挑战,并有可能导致儿童出现功能障碍。一项聚焦于非洲研究的文献快速回顾探讨了ECC对儿童口腔健康相关生活质量的影响。符合纳入标准的三项研究表明,ECC对生活的多个维度产生负面影响,包括身体健康(疼痛、营养不良、咀嚼困难)、心理健康(自卑、耻辱感)和社会功能(同伴关系、上学出勤率)。严重的ECC影响更为明显,尤其是在症状和心理领域。本文强调迫切需要在非洲的公共卫生框架内将未经治疗的ECC视为一种残疾。政策建议包括将口腔健康纳入初级医疗保健系统、扩大基于社区的预防项目、激励生产负担得起的口腔健康产品以及开展基于学校的教育倡议。加强口腔卫生工作人员的能力以及加强关于ECC患病率的数据收集对于有效的政策制定和资源分配至关重要。将ECC视为一种潜在的残疾凸显了采取多部门方法来应对这一被忽视的公共卫生优先事项的必要性,并且在国际残疾人日(12月3日)之际,需要优先采取行动消除未经治疗的ECC。