| Literature DB >> 31416123 |
Lucía I Floríndez1, Daniella C Floríndez2, Francesca M Floríndez3, Dominique H Como4, Elizabeth Pyatak4, Lourdes Baezconde-Garbanati5, Jose C Polido6, Sharon A Cermak4.
Abstract
As a result of various barriers, several pediatric populations are at risk for poor oral health, including children with disabilities and children from under-represented populations, such as Latinos. To this end, this study aimed to better understand the factors that affect the oral health experiences of 32 Latino parents/caregivers from 18 families (n = 8 with a typically developing child and n = 10 with a child with Autism). Using a qualitative descriptive methodology, each family was interviewed twice. Interviews were audio-recorded, transcribed verbatim, and coded thematically to identify the individual, social, systemic, and culturally rooted factors contributing to oral health disparities in the families. The three themes that arose were "Why would I want to start trouble?": Latino parents' dissatisfaction with dental treatments, costs, and fear of the dentist and health care providers because of their ethnic minority status as key factors inhibiting receipt of dental care; "We have to put our children first": prioritizing the oral care activities of their children over their own individual oral care needs; and "We always keep baking soda around": familial and cultural influences on oral care habits. Understanding the oral health beliefs and experiences of Latino parents and caregivers of children with and without autism is critical for developing targeted prevention and intervention programs and reducing oral health disparities.Entities:
Keywords: Latinos; autism spectrum disorder; children; culture; health disparities; oral care
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31416123 PMCID: PMC6721061 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph16162905
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Interview guide questions.
| Guiding Question |
|---|
| Daily Routines |
| Tell me what your typical oral care routines are like? |
| Are there other people or things that influence your oral care/routines? |
| Is there any other information you would like to share with me about your oral health routines? |
| Perceptions of oral care |
| How would you describe your oral health status? (you, your child) |
| How do your experiences impact your child? |
| Is there anything that makes your oral care easier? Harder? |
| Cultural Background |
| How has your oral care changed, if at all, since you have been in the US? |
| How does your family background/beliefs/culture impact your oral health? |
| What are your beliefs about oral health? Where did you learn them? |
Sample characteristics.
| Characteristics | Parents of cASD ( | Parents of TD Children ( |
|---|---|---|
| Language Spoken | ||
| English | 70% (7) | 50% (4) |
| Spanish | 30% (3) | 50% (4) |
| Primary Caregiver Gender | ||
| Female | 90% (9) | 100% (8) |
| Male | 10% (1) | 0 |
| Years of Education (range) of participating parent | 13 (6–19) | 13.9 (7–17) |
| Mean Number of Children in family (range) | 2.25 (1–4) | 1.9 (1–3) |
| Age of child enrolled in study | 9.0 (6–12) | 7.9 (6–12) |
| Parent Nativity | ||
| Central America (Mexico, Guatemala, El Salvador) | 40% (4) | 62.5% (5) |
| South America | 10% (1) | 12.5% (1) |
| United States | 50% (5) | 25% (2) |
| Acculturation* | * on a 5-point scale, scores over 2.5 indicate higher level of adherence to cultural domain. 2.5 of above in both categories indicates biculturalism | |
| Hispanic | 2.958 (1.07) | 2.979 (0.955) |
| Non-Hispanic | 3.367 (0.641) | 2.712 (1.024) |
Data are presented as mean (range), percentage (n), or mean (standard deviation).