Ellen A Gnaedinger1. 1. VA Medical Center White River Junction, Vermont.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: The United States has a public health crisis of dental caries in children's primary teeth. Fifty-five percent of children have dental caries by age 8. The majority of these children are nonwhite and poor. Caries could be decreased by 40% if fluoride varnish (FV) application started with tooth eruption. DESIGN AND SAMPLE: A four-month FV application QI project was implemented in a rural pediatric practice. The staff was trained by the Vermont Department of Health using the From the First Tooth protocol. Children aged 9, 18, 24, and 30 months. MEASURES: Pre- and postproject questionnaires were completed. A caries risk tool assessed a child's risk and access to dental care. Completed FV applications were recorded and staff interviewed weekly. INTERVENTION: FV application was offered at well child checks (WCCs). RESULTS: Fifty-six percent of sample patients received FV at their WCCs. Qualitative themes included the following: reasons subjects did/did not receive FV, ease of FV application, increased oral hygiene education, visit flow, application time, older children's FV need, and billing issues. CONCLUSION: This economical, FV application program can be readily implemented by nurse practitioners and nurses in pediatric practices where children have inadequate dental care.
OBJECTIVES: The United States has a public health crisis of dental caries in children's primary teeth. Fifty-five percent of children have dental caries by age 8. The majority of these children are nonwhite and poor. Caries could be decreased by 40% if fluoride varnish (FV) application started with tooth eruption. DESIGN AND SAMPLE: A four-month FV application QI project was implemented in a rural pediatric practice. The staff was trained by the Vermont Department of Health using the From the First Tooth protocol. Children aged 9, 18, 24, and 30 months. MEASURES: Pre- and postproject questionnaires were completed. A caries risk tool assessed a child's risk and access to dental care. Completed FV applications were recorded and staff interviewed weekly. INTERVENTION: FV application was offered at well child checks (WCCs). RESULTS: Fifty-six percent of sample patients received FV at their WCCs. Qualitative themes included the following: reasons subjects did/did not receive FV, ease of FV application, increased oral hygiene education, visit flow, application time, older children's FV need, and billing issues. CONCLUSION: This economical, FV application program can be readily implemented by nurse practitioners and nurses in pediatric practices where children have inadequate dental care.
Authors: Caroline K Geiger; Ashley M Kranz; Andrew W Dick; Erin Duffy; Mark Sorbero; Bradley D Stein Journal: J Rural Health Date: 2018-12-07 Impact factor: 4.333
Authors: Sathyanarayan Sudhanthar; Jillian Lapinski; Jane Turner; Jonathan Gold; Yakov Sigal; Kripa Thakur; Olga Napolova; Michael Stiffler Journal: BMJ Open Qual Date: 2019-05-31