| Literature DB >> 31850296 |
Lynn Gargano1, Margaret K Mason1, Mary E Northridge1.
Abstract
In the United States and elsewhere, children are more likely to have poor oral health if they are homeless, poor, and/or members of racial/ethnic minority and immigrant populations who have suboptimal access to oral health care. As a result, poor oral health serves as the primary marker of social inequality. Here, the authors posit that school-based oral health programs that aim to purposefully address determinants of health care access, health and well-being, and skills-based health education across multiple levels of influence (individual/population, interpersonal, community, and societal/policy) may be more effective in achieving oral health equity than programs that solely target a single outcome (screening, education) or operate only on the individual level. An ecological model is derived from previously published multilevel frameworks and the World Health Organization (WHO) concept of a health-promoting school. The extant literature is then examined for examples of evaluated school-based oral health programs, their locations and outcomes(s)/determinant(s) of interest, the levels of influence they target, and their effectiveness and equity attributes. The authors view school-based oral health programs as vehicles for advancing oral health equity, since vulnerable children often lack access to any preventive or treatment services absent on-site care provision at schools. At the same time, they are incapable of achieving sustainable results without attention to multiple levels of influence. Policy solutions that improve the nutritional quality of children's diets in schools and neighborhoods and engage alternative providers at all levels of influence may be both effective and equitable.Entities:
Keywords: common risk factor approach; dental services; ecological model; federally qualified health centers; interventions to reduce inequalities; oral disease prevention; oral health equity; school-based oral health programs
Year: 2019 PMID: 31850296 PMCID: PMC6901974 DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2019.00359
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Public Health ISSN: 2296-2565
Figure 1An Ecological Model to Advance Oral Health Equity. An ecological model of influences on health care access, skills-based health education, and health and well-being brought about by school-based oral health programs, adapted from previous work by the senior author (14–16), with key contributions from the World Health Organization concept of a health promoting school (17, 18).
Selected models of school-based oral health programs, along with their locations, outcome(s)/determinant(s) of interest, level(s) of influence, and effectiveness and equity attributes.
| Detty ( | Ohio, USA | Screening to determine measures of health and well-being [oral health and height/weight to determine body mass index (BMI)] | Individual/population | Screening in isolation only provides data for monitoring the burden of disease, without improving the outcomes of interest | Lower participation rates were found with high student mobility and large school size |
| Blake et al. ( | East Midlands, UK | Skills-based health education (single interactive evidence-based educational session) | Individual, interpersonal | Short-term improvements in children's knowledge of oral health and use of dental floss, but not in toothbrushing or dietary behaviors | 100% participation rate was achieved, ensuring that all children received the intervention |
| Jaime et al. ( | Monte Sião, Brazil | Skills-based health education [(1) the school dentist initially gave a lecture to the children's parents; (2) the school dentist then gave a short course to the school staff; and (3) the trained teachers subsequently delivered a 6-module course to the students] | Individual, interpersonal | After 3 years, caries incidence was not decreased, but slight improvements in health knowledge were found (i.e., knowledge of dental caries and use of dental floss every day) | Monte Sião has a Human Development Index of 0.811 (slightly higher than the Brazilian average of 0.792) and fluoridated water |
| Esan et al. ( | Ile-Ife, Nigeria | Skills-based health education (school-based oral health education curriculum for primary school children, complemented by a community-based educational program targeted to 3 groups: pregnant women, parents, and teachers) | Individual, interpersonal, community | After 4 years, the results were mixed: use of fluoridated toothpaste and toothbrushing twice daily improved, but not consumption of sugary snacks or daily flossing | The inability of control participants to purchase toothbrushes and other commodities for preventive oral self-care may have biased the findings |
| Saied-Moallemi et al. ( | Tehran, Iran | Skills-based health education (the intervention consisted of illustrative puzzles as learning tools for the children and an oral health educational leaflet and brushing diary for the parents) | Individual, interpersonal | During the 3-month school-based intervention, 60% of the children in the intervention group and 32% of the children in the control group achieved a healthy gingiva | Girls experienced fewer barriers to dental care after the program and were more likely to achieve a healthy gingiva than boys |
| Lai et al. ( | Taipei area, Taiwan | School influences on oral health practices (meticulous instructions on finger flossing the Bass method of brushing of children originally aged 10-11 years, guided and monitored by dentists and school nurses; intensive oral health education by school nurses and dental concepts by dentists) | Individual, interpersonal | After 10 years of follow-up, positive effects were found on the dental knowledge, oral hygiene habits, plaque scores, periodontal status, caries experience, and preventive dental visits of children in the intervention group | Parents' educational level did not differ between the intervention and control groups |
| Larsen et al. ( | New York, NY, USA | School-based dental and health care services (largely diagnostic, preventive, and restorative, with small percentages of endodontics, periodontics, surgery, and adjunctive services delivered by dentists and dental hygienists) | Individual, interpersonal, community | School-based clinics are more productive, efficient, and cost-effective than community-based clinics in providing dental care to underserved children, and perform more preventive services | Transportation issues, parent availability, and missed appointments are greatly reduced in school-based health clinics |
| Carpino et al. ( | Kansas City, MO, USA | School-based dental and health care services (examinations, oral health instructions, prophylaxis, fluoride applications, restorations, sealants, emergency visits, extractions, and endodontic treatment delivered by dental and dental hygiene students) | Individual, interpersonal, community | As the encounter intensity with a dental or dental hygiene student increased, so too did the oral health of children (decrease in decay, increase in restorations, and reduction in referral urgency) | Only 27.9% of eligible students participated in the program, the vast majority of whom qualified for the free or reduced lunch program |
| Amalia et al. ( | Province of Yogyakarta, island of Java, Indonesia | School-based dental and health care services (oral health screening followed by oral health education in classrooms at least twice a year; classroom tooth brushing; children identified with caries receive full treatment upon referral; and all teachers are trained in oral health matters at least once a year) | Individual, interpersonal, community | Children participating in a poorly performing program had a greater likelihood of experiencing an oral impact on their quality of life, but difficulty with eating was higher (42.4%) for good programs than for poor programs (38.6%) | Living in a rural area and being a girl were significantly associated with a greater risk of having a lower quality of life |
| Culler et al. ( | Chelsea, MA, USA | School-based dental and health care services [annual oral health education, dental screening and referral, and application of dental sealants and fluoride varnish; preventive and restorative treatment (exams, cleanings, and fillings) provided at a centrally located, full-service, school-based dental clinic open year-round] | Individual/population, interpersonal, community | A greater percentage of Chelsea students had untreated decay and severe treatment need than students statewide, but fewer Chelsea third graders had severe treatment need and more had dental sealants | There was no significant difference in the percentage of Chelsea students having severe treatment need or dental sealants by income level |
| Muirhead and Lawrence ( | York Region, Ontario, Canada | Multi-level intervention (the Healthy Schools recognition program is a voluntary program managed by the 72 Ontario school boards; existing or proposed health-related activities included healthy eating, physical activity, bullying prevention, personal safety and injury prevention, substance use and abuse, healthy growth and development and mental health activities) | Individual/population, interpersonal, community, societal/policy | School participation/neighborhood socioeconomic factor interactions were present: a lower percentage of children in low-income “Healthy Schools” had preventive and urgent dental treatment needs and 2 or more decayed teeth than in low-income non-participating schools | Schools situated in poorer neighborhoods may benefit more from health promotion activities than schools situated in more affluent neighborhoods |
| Edasseri et al. ( | Greater Montreal, Québec, Canada | Multi-level intervention (the QUALITY cohort recruited 630 white children aged 8-10 years at baseline from schools located within 75 km of 3 urban centers in the province of Québec; trained dentists performed the clinical oral health examination in a dental office during the hospital visit) | Individual/population, interpersonal, community, societal/policy | Children attending schools with strong healthy eating programs had lower 2-year incidence of dental caries than schools with weak programs | Greatest protection against dental caries was found with both strong healthy eating environments inside the schools and favorable food environments around the schools |
| Ariga et al. ( | Kuwait | Multi-level intervention (School Oral Health Program, Kuwait, delivers oral health education, prevention, and treatment to 280,000 school-aged children; delivery of care is through a system of center- and school-based clinics and preventive mobile teams that deliver preventive services to children in schools without permanent dental clinics) | Individual/population, interpersonal, community, societal/policy | Effective primary prevention of dental caries is emphasized, resulting in a considerable reduction in treatment needs, which is evident from the reduced number of composite restorations performed under this program during the last 6 years | Prevention coverage (biannual application of fluoride varnish and the placement of pit and fissure sealants on newly erupted permanent molars and premolars) is close to 80%. |
| Wolff et al. ( | Grenada | Multi-level intervention (toothbrushing in the classrooms, fluoride varnish applications, and placement of sealants; use of fluoride varnish in the hands of lay professionals provides a simple and safe caries-preventive therapy that can be utilized as a public health intervention through different providers when governmental organizations recognize that the benefits can far outweigh minimal risks) | Individual/population, interpersonal, community, societal/policy | The results of the pre- and post-caries surveys indicated a reduction in caries incidence, yet a high volume, less labor-intensive sealant technique could not be effectively achieved when sealant retention was utilized as an outcome measure | Increased awareness of good oral health among children, teachers, parents, and local health care providers, and trained teachers and local providers to deliver the intervention toward improving its sustainability |