| Literature DB >> 22577401 |
E J Parker1, G Misan, M Shearer, L Richards, A Russell, H Mills, L M Jamieson.
Abstract
Aboriginal Australian children experience profound oral health disparities relative to their non-Aboriginal counterparts. In response to community concerns regarding Aboriginal child oral health in the regional town of Port Augusta, South Australia, a child dental health service was established within a Community Controlled Aboriginal Health Service. A partnership approach was employed with the key aims of (1) quantifying rates of dental service utilisation, (2) identifying factors influencing participation, and (3) planning and establishing a program for delivery of Aboriginal children's dental services that would increase participation and adapt to community needs. In planning the program, levels of participation were quantified and key issues identified through semistructured interviews. After 3.5 years, the participation rate for dental care among the target population increased from 53 to 70 percent. Key areas were identified to encourage further improvements and ensure sustainability in Aboriginal child oral health in this regional location.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22577401 PMCID: PMC3346980 DOI: 10.1155/2012/496236
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Pediatr ISSN: 1687-9740
Consent rates for Aboriginal children in Port Augusta with comparisons to state-wide data.
| School type (number of schools included) | Number of Aboriginal students (range for individual schools) | Pt Augusta Aboriginal active consent rate (range for individual schools) | SA 2000 | Port Augusta non-Aboriginal calculated active consent |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pre and primary school (8) | 537 (4–129) | 58.8 (0–75.9) | 76.1% | 85.7% |
| High school (2) | 169 (16–53) | 35.5 (30.7–81.3) | 49.4% | Not available |
Key issues and challenges identified through informal interviews.
| Key issue/challenges | Associated issues/barriers identified |
|---|---|
| Difficulty contacting patients | Frequent change of address |
| Irregular use of letterboxes | |
| Appointment cards returned to sender | |
| Patients moving towns at a high rate, sometimes leaving Pt Augusta and returning months later—clinic not notified | |
| Patients not on telephone or frequent change of number | |
| Children changing schools | |
| Nonattendance at school | |
| Schools unable to release contact details | |
| Patients may use more than one surname | |
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| High rate of failure to attend appointments | Difficulties with transport |
| Priority placed on oral health in combination with other physical, social, and emotional well-being issues of individuals and families | |
| Wednesdays and Thursdays are “money days” when pensions are paid, bringing with it other priorities for adults | |
| Lack of understanding of the importance of dental care | |
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| Attendance patterns | Attend for relief of pain |
| Nonattendance for routine and preventative care | |
| Lack of understanding of the importance of preventative care in contrast to relief of pain | |
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| Consent issues | Patient may be residing with someone who is not parent or legal guardian |
| Difficulty contacting parent or guardian when treatment decision needs to be made | |
| Cultural differences and rules in regard to consent not understood and accepted by mainstream policies | |
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| Difficulty communicating with parents and guardians | Parents and guardians often seem uncomfortable in the dental clinic |
| Parents seem uncomfortable communicating with dental service staff | |
| Lack of understanding of dental disease, prevention and importance of dental care | |
| Different approach to and understandings of treatment decision making (different between staff and patients/parents) | |
| Lack of Aboriginal staff in the mainstream dental clinic | |
Key differences between ACDP and the mainstream SDS.
| Issue | Aboriginal child dental program | Mainstream school dental service |
|---|---|---|
| Location | The clinic operated from within PWHS, a service that the local Aboriginal community was accustomed to accessing for whole of health and health-related services | Mainstream clinic, used by non-Aboriginal and Aboriginal clients |
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| Integrated | Into the health service as part of the holistic philosophy of Aboriginal Health Care | Not part of any other health service |
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| Health promotion | Staff were involved in health promotion initiatives in schools and through community events | No specific health promotion programs targeting Aboriginal children or families |
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| Staff | An Aboriginal Primary Health Care worker was the key contact and liaison for the community and clinical staff, providing community links, contacts, information, and cultural support. Over seventy percent of the staff at PWHS are Aboriginal and are representative of the diverse language groups accessing the service | No Aboriginal staff |
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| Transport | A transport officer was employed to transport children and parents to and from dental appointments, to the chemist and specialist services | No specific transport services available for Aboriginal clients |
October 2005 enrolments.
| Mainstream School Dental Service | PWHS | Dual enrolment | Total School Dental Service enrolment | As a percentage of school enrolments | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Enrolled | 137 | 679 | 31 | 785 | 101% |
| On recall | 137 | 438 | 31 | 544 | 70% |
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