| Literature DB >> 30818846 |
Dominique H Como1, Leah I Stein Duker2, José C Polido3, Sharon A Cermak4.
Abstract
Oral health is an important yet often neglected component of overall health, linked to heart disease, stroke, and diabetic complications. Disparities exist for many groups, including racial and ethnic minorities such as African Americans. The purpose of this study was to examine the potential factors that perpetuate oral health care disparities in African American children in the United States. A systematic search of three literature databases produced 795 articles; 23 articles were included in the final review. Articles were analyzed using a template coding approach based on the social ecological model. The review identified structural, sociocultural, and familial factors that impact the ability of African Americans to utilize oral care services, highlighting the importance of the parent/caregiver role and the patient⁻provider relationship; policy-level processes that impact access to quality care; the value of autonomy in treatment and prevention options; and the impact of sociocultural factors on food choices (e.g., food deserts, gestures of affection). In conclusion, oral health care remains an underutilized service by African American children, despite increasing access to oral care secondary to improvements in insurance coverage and community-based programs.Entities:
Keywords: African American; dental care; disparity; minority; oral care; social determinants of health
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30818846 PMCID: PMC6427601 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph16050710
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1PRISMA flowchart.
Articles that describe oral health barriers African American families encounter.
| Reference | Purpose | Population | Study Design | Key Findings | Category |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| To explore factors and identify strategies that could improve the oral health of low income and minority children | 25 state and federal policy makers, workforce experts, foundation officials, educators, researchers with interest in children’s oral health | Qualitative Study; interviews with stakeholder and policy makers | Policy stakeholders believe that improving oral health for children requires addressing: both consumer demand and provider supply, lack of outcry for accessible oral health, undervaluing oral health, health literacy and outreach campaigns | Structural |
|
| To document the rates of prevention, restoration, and surgical dental procedures provided to children enrolled in private insurance, Delta Dental | 266,380 children (age 0–18) (12% African American), that received care from 2002–2008 in Milwaukee | Descriptive study; registry summary design | 44% of AA had one dental visit during study period; rates of preventative procedures increased to age 9 and then decreased | Structural |
|
| To understand what parents consider to be important factors and resources that influence their child’s oral care | Utilized Photovoice with 10 parents of infants and toddlers; five group sessions were conducted | Qualitative Study; participatory research approach | Poor oral health was associated with avoidance of problems; financial constraints, time constraints, and occasional parental frustration completing child’s oral hygiene routines | Familial, Sociocultural, Structural |
|
| To compare sociodemographic differences between caries and no caries groups and investigate factors associated with untreated dental caries | 2453 participants (5.8% African American), children (age 6–15), school-based dental sealant program in KY | Observational Study; pooled cross-sectional design | Older children living in rural areas were more likely to have untreated dental caries and lack insurance | Structural |
|
| To explore oral health perceptions and dental care behaviors among rural adolescents | 100 rural youth (age 12–18), (80% Black), low SES | Qualitative study; emergent thematic approach | Perceived threat from oral disease was low, esthetics main reason for seeking care; access, finances, transportation, and fear were also noted | Sociocultural |
|
| Examine relationship between race and dental services | 1408 participants (59.3% African American) | Observational Study; cross-sectional analysis of data from The Exploring Health Disparities in Integrated Communities (Baltimore, MD) | More AA used dental services in previous 2 years; place of living an important factor to consider when seeking to understand race difference in dental service use | Structural |
|
| To assess the extent that factors other than race explain disparities in children’s oral health | Data from National Survey of Children’s Health Children (n = 82,020) (age 2–17) | Observational Study; model based survey data analysis | AA more likely to report poor oral health, lack preventative care, and experience unmet need. However, these are attenuated, to varying degrees, when researchers adjust for socioeconomic status | Structural |
|
| To identify racial/ethnic disparities in medical and oral health, access to care, and uses of services in U.S. children | Sample from National Surveys of Children’s Health, parents of 90,117 children (age 0–17), (9.84% African American) | Descriptive study; secondary analysis | Disparities continue to exist, with increased use of services disparities decreased; however, several new disparities for African American children including uninsurance rates and difficulty getting specialty care | Structural |
|
| To examine parental awareness of and the reasons for lack of insurance coverage in eligible communities | 97 recruitment sites; 267 participants (age 0–18) (35% African American) | Observational Study; cross-sectional design | Half the participants were unaware that their children were eligible for federally funded insurance | Structural |
|
| To measure inequalities in children’s dental health based on racial/ethnic identity | Representative sample of children and adolescents (age 2–11); White, Black, Hispanic | Observational Study; decomposition model for analysis | SES accounted for 71% of the gap in preventive dental care between AA and White | Structural |
|
| To examine the impact of national health policies on AA children’s receipt of dental care | Children 2–17 years old; from 1964 to 2010 | Observational study | Percent of AA children without a dental visit declined significantly over time | Sociocultural, Structural |
|
| To examine racial/ethnic disparities in medical and oral health status, access to care and use of services in U.S. adolescents | 47,728 parent responses from National Surveys of Children’s Health for adolescents (age 10–17), (9.84% African American) | Descriptive study; secondary analysis | Suboptimal health and lack of personal doctor were found to be one of the most profound disparities to exist | Structural |
|
| To look at racial and ethnic differences between children with private insurance and those in Medicaid or CHIP | Sample from the California Survey of Health, 10,805 children (age 0–11) (7% African American) | Descriptive study | AA with Medicare more likely to have longer intervals between visits than Caucasian children with Medicare | Structural |
AA = African American; SES = socioeconomic status; CHIP = Children’s Health Insurance Program.
Studies that describe oral health facilitators and assess efforts to address the oral health problems African American families face.
| Reference | Purpose | Population | Study Design | Key Findings | Category |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| To determine AA parents’ treatment acceptability and treatment preferences to prevent early childhood caries | 48 parents/caregivers with an African American child (age 1–5) | Mixed method study; concurrent triangulation design | All treatments were acceptable; parents strongly preferred tooth brushing rather than fluoride varnish and the use of xylitol in gum or food | Familial |
|
| Provide developmental program focused on promoting healthy lifestyles to inner-city youth including one module focused on oral hygiene | 46 African American youth (age 11–14) | Experimental study; non-randomized controlled trial; 5-week module intervention | Surveys indicated that 42% of the participants exhibited positive behavioral change following completion of the oral hygiene module | Sociocultural |
|
| To evaluate school-based dental sealant programs | Framingham school district 2nd graders (≈6% African American) with dental sealants | Experimental; non-randomized controlled trial | School based dental sealant programs can help decrease barriers for access to dental services | Structural |
|
| To assess the relationship between behavioral factors and caries in AA preschoolers | 96 African American children (age 3–22 months) | Observational study; longitudinal cohort study | Living in a non-fluoridated community, more frequent consumption of sweetened food, less frequent consumption of 100% juice, less frequent tooth brushing, significantly associated with greater ECC incidence. | Sociocultural, Structural |
|
| To investigate the influence of caregiver education level on dental caries | 423 children (age 5–6) and caregiver dyads (94% African American), low income, urban | Cross-sectional design; secondary analysis of longitudinal study data | Caregiver education level was associated with 34% less untreated decayed teeth | Familial |
|
| To evaluate the effectiveness of a tailored intervention on oral health behaviors and new untreated caries | 1021 randomly selected African American children (age 0–5) and their caregivers | Experimental study; randomized controlled trial | Caregivers receiving motivational interviewing and watching DVD more likely to report checking for “pre-cavities” | Familial |
|
| To investigate the association between snacking and caries | 1206 preschool children (age 1–4) (61% African American) | Observational study; cross-sectional design | Presence of plaque, sugar intake and SES were associated; consumption of chips was associated with caries | Sociocultural, Structural |
|
| To assess follow-up dental care received by children given baseline screening and referrals as part of an ongoing clinical trial | 303 participants (age 5–6), (96% African American), who had at least one dental visit | Observational study; retrospective cohort design | Utilization of dental services was low for poor minority inner city kindergarten children despite school screening referrals and parental reminders | Structural |
|
| To identify possible relationships between parent/guardian sociodemographic, intention, knowledge, and oral health status of their child | 181 child (age 3–5) and parent/ caregiver dyad (31% African American), Head Start program | Observational study; cross-sectional design | Caregiver race/ethnicity and years of education were inversely significantly associated with decayed, missing or filled teeth | Familial, Structural |
|
| To explore behavioral factors associated with toothaches among African American adolescents | Convenience sample of 156 African American adolescents (age 10–18) | Observational study; cross-sectional design | Age and consumption of cariogenic snacks and soda are related to toothache pain | Sociocultural, Structural |
ECC = early childhood caries.
Figure 2Percentages of review articles’ results categorized into each thematic category. Note: Group percentages do not sum to 100% as articles included in the review could reference more than one thematic category.