Literature DB >> 20837088

Why guidelines for early childhood caries prevention could be ineffective amongst children at high risk.

Stefano Petti1.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: This paper sought to investigate whether early childhood caries (ECC) prevention guidelines were able to produce a significant, long-term, homogeneous decrease in ECC prevalence/incidence within all socio-economic strata of the population and whether their development followed methodologies specifically designed for ECC prevention guidelines.
METHODS: ECC prevention guidelines and specific methodologies published in English since 1995 were searched through MEDLINE, PUBMED and GOOGLE. Data regarding long-term and stratified effect of guidelines and specific methodologies were not found. The only review of methodology for guideline development which was found (produced by the Guideline Development Group of the WHO) was used and adjusted to draft a specific ECC-centred methodology.
RESULTS: This procedure resulted in nineteen key methodological components for the optimal ECC prevention guideline development. In order to emphasize such necessity of specific methodologies, three of these components (assessment of the strength of scientific evidence, development of consensus amongst Dental Health Care Providers, identification of appropriate outcomes) were described in detail. These examples showed the shortfalls of ECC prevention guidelines developed using methodologies explicitly designed for the development of clinical practice (e.g., therapy, diagnosis, screening) guidelines.
CONCLUSIONS: Guidelines for ECC prevention could help control such disease and improve quality of life of children at high ECC risk. However, the lack of specific methodologies for their development led to the consequence that, despite the fact that many ECC prevention guidelines exist, their effectiveness in the final goal of obtaining a significant, long-term and homogeneous reduction of ECC incidence, is not proved.
Copyright © 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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Mesh:

Year:  2010        PMID: 20837088     DOI: 10.1016/j.jdent.2010.09.002

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Dent        ISSN: 0300-5712            Impact factor:   4.379


  10 in total

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Review 3.  Acculturation and Pediatric Minority Oral Health Interventions.

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4.  Randomized Trial of Motivational Interviewing to Prevent Early Childhood Caries in American Indian Children.

Authors:  T S Batliner; T Tiwari; W G Henderson; A R Wilson; S E Gregorich; K A Fehringer; A G Brega; E Swyers; T Zacher; M M Harper; K Plunkett; W Santo; N F Cheng; S Shain; M Rasmussen; S M Manson; J Albino
Journal:  JDR Clin Trans Res       Date:  2018-07-12

5.  Early Childhood Caries in Indigenous Communities.

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Review 6.  Ebola Virus Infection among Western Healthcare Workers Unable to Recall the Transmission Route.

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7.  Community-based interventions to reduce dental caries among 24-month old children: a pilot study of a field trial.

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8.  Joint and independent effects of alcohol drinking and tobacco smoking on oral cancer: a large case-control study.

Authors:  José Leopoldo Ferreira Antunes; Tatiana Natasha Toporcov; Maria Gabriela Haye Biazevic; Antonio Fernando Boing; Crispian Scully; Stefano Petti
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9.  The Impact of Maternal Self-Efficacy and Oral Health Beliefs on Early Childhood Caries in Latino Children.

Authors:  Anne R Wilson; Matthew J Mulvahill; Tamanna Tiwari
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10.  Lessons learned on recruitment and retention in hard-to-reach families in a phase III randomised controlled trial of preparatory information for children undergoing general anaesthesia.

Authors:  C Huntington; J Timothy Newton; N Donaldson; C Liossi; P A Reynolds; R Alharatani; M T Hosey
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  10 in total

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