Kandahari Nazineen, Moulana Zada Fareha, Farzal Zainab
Department of Otolaryngology University of North Carolina Chapel Hill North Carolina USA.
Department of Surgery University of California, san Francisco San Francisco California USA.
Laryngoscope Investig Otolaryngol. 2025 Jul 24;10(4):e70194. doi: 10.1002/lio2.70194. eCollection 2025 Aug.
We sought to understand oral health problems among refugee children resettled in developed nations and determine best practices for addressing them.
A systematic review was performed and reported in accordance with Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses guidelines. A comprehensive search was performed using the PubMed, CINAHL, and Scopus databases from 1980 through 2024 using Medical Subject Heading terms: "children," "refugee," and "oral health," and a separate search in which "oral health" was replaced with "dental caries." Interventional, qualitative, and epidemiological studies about children resettled in developed nations were included. Critical study appraisal was done using the Critical Appraisal Skills Program (CASP) tool developed at Oxford University. Final data were synthesized in tables and graphs, depicting the study designs, locations, dates of data collection, sample sizes, sample characteristics, and major findings.
Of 30 studies, 25 analyzed oral health in refugee children directly, and six were qualitative studies interviewing parents/caregivers and key informants. Twelve cross-sectional studies included clinical exams, identifying as many as 78% of refugee children with dental caries. Eight studies comparing refugee children to age-and sex-matched children in respective developed countries showed refugee status conferred significantly worse oral health. Two interventional studies demonstrated that parental education improved knowledge but did not improve children's oral health, whereas oral screenings at dedicated refugee health clinics facilitated children receiving referrals and completing treatment. Review data was limited by the lack of standardized or comprehensive measures of oral health.
The refugee pediatric population is at higher risk of oral disease than nonrefugee immigrant and native-born patient populations. Developed nations should address this disparity with community and healthcare partnerships and research, particularly prospective and interventional studies. Otolaryngologists care for the clinical consequences of poor oral health and hygiene and therefore share responsibility in facilitating preventive efforts.
我们试图了解在发达国家重新安置的难民儿童的口腔健康问题,并确定解决这些问题的最佳做法。
按照系统评价和Meta分析的首选报告项目指南进行系统评价并报告。使用医学主题词,在1980年至2024年期间对PubMed、CINAHL和Scopus数据库进行全面检索:“儿童”、“难民”和“口腔健康”,并进行单独检索,将“口腔健康”替换为“龋齿”。纳入了关于在发达国家重新安置的儿童的干预性、定性和流行病学研究。使用牛津大学开发的批判性评估技能计划(CASP)工具进行批判性研究评估。最终数据综合在表格和图表中,描述了研究设计、地点、数据收集日期、样本量、样本特征和主要发现。
在30项研究中,25项直接分析了难民儿童的口腔健康,6项是对父母/照顾者和关键信息提供者进行访谈的定性研究。12项横断面研究包括临床检查,发现多达78%的难民儿童患有龋齿。8项将难民儿童与各自发达国家中年龄和性别匹配的儿童进行比较的研究表明,难民身份导致口腔健康明显更差。两项干预性研究表明,家长教育提高了知识水平,但没有改善儿童的口腔健康,而在专门的难民健康诊所进行口腔筛查有助于儿童获得转诊并完成治疗。由于缺乏标准化或全面的口腔健康测量方法,综述数据受到限制。
难民儿童群体比非难民移民和本土出生的患者群体患口腔疾病的风险更高。发达国家应通过社区和医疗保健伙伴关系及研究来解决这一差距,特别是前瞻性和干预性研究。耳鼻喉科医生负责处理口腔健康和卫生状况不佳的临床后果,因此在促进预防工作方面也负有责任。