| Literature DB >> 35048013 |
Jieyi Chen1, Duangporn Duangthip2, Sherry Shiqian Gao2, Fang Huang1, Robert Anthonappa3, Branca Heloisa Oliveira4, Bathsheba Turton5, Callum Durward5, Maha El Tantawi6, Dina Attia6, Masahiro Heima7, Murugan Satta Muthu8,9, Diah Ayu Maharani10, Morenik Oluwatoyin Folayan11, Prathip Phantumvanit12, Thanya Sitthisettapong12, Nicola Innes13, Yasmi O Crystal14, Francisco Ramos-Gomez15, Aida Carolina Medina16, Edward Chin Man Lo2, Chun Hung Chu2.
Abstract
Aim: Early childhood caries (ECC) has significant public health implications but has received inadequate global attention. There is limited information regarding the success of oral health policies implemented to address the challenges of ECC. This review aimed to summarize such policies to tackle ECC from different countries/regions. Method: Independent collaborators from 14 countries/regions (Australia, Brazil, Cambodia, China, Hong Kong, Egypt, India, Indonesia, Japan, Nigeria, Thailand, UK, USA, and Venezuela) collected the data. The ECC status, dental workforce, oral health policies on ECC prevention in different countries/regions were summarized by each country.Entities:
Keywords: child; dental caries; early childhood caries; fluorides; oral health; policy
Year: 2021 PMID: 35048013 PMCID: PMC8757786 DOI: 10.3389/froh.2021.670154
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oral Health ISSN: 2673-4842
Early childhood caries: prevalence and caries experience in different countries/regions included in this review.
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| Australia [ | 2016 | 5,130 | 5–6 y: 34% | 2.7 |
| Brazil [ | 2010 | 7,217 | 5 y: 53 % | 2.43 |
| Cambodia [ | 2017 | 3,985 | 1 y: 20% | 1 y: 0.7 (1.7) |
| China [ | 2015 | 40,360 | 3 y: 51% | 3 y: 2.3 (3.4) |
| Egypt [ | 2013–2014 | 651 | 3–6 y: 69% | 3–6 y: 3.5 (3.6) |
| Hong Kong [ | 2016 | 1,204 | 3 y: 38% | 3 y: 1.4 (2.9) |
| India [ | 2019 | – | 0–6 y: 50% | – |
| Indonesia [ | 2018 | 1,872 | 3–4 y: 81% | 3–4 y: 6.2 |
| Japan [ | 2016 | 165 | 1 y: 0% | 1 y: 0 |
| Nigeria [ | 2014 | 497 | 1–5 y: 7% | Overall: 0.15 |
| Thailand [ | 2017 | 8,308 | 3 y: 53% | 3 y: 2.8 |
| UK [ | 2019 | 6,900 | 5 y: 23% | 5 y: 0.8 |
| USA [ | 2016 | 7,000 | 2–5 y: 21% | – |
| Venezuela [ | 2013–2014 | 293 | 0–5 y: 80% | – |
dmft, decayed, missing and filled teeth.
The data are from a systematic review not a population-based data.
No reliable combined data for all UK (i.e., England, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland). Data for England are the most representative, although may be a slight underestimate.
Based on dft score instead of dmft score.
Data were extracted from national/territory-wide survey.
Figure 1Caries prevalence (%) and caries experience [decayed, missing and filled teeth (dmft) index] of primary teeth in children.
Updated dental health workforce data: number of dentists, pediatric dentists, ratio of dentist to population, and ratio of pediatric dentist to child population (aged 0–5-years).
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| Australia | 25.5 [ | 1.6 [ | 21,838 [ | 156 [ | 1:1,100 | 1:10,300 |
| Brazil | 211.8 [ | 14.7 [ | 342,193 [ | 8,953 [ | 1:600 | 1:1,600 |
| Cambodia | 16.9 [ | 1.7 | 1,826 [ | 2 | 1:9,300 | 1:850,000 |
| China | 1,400.0 [ | 90.3 [ | 245,000 [ | – | 1:5,700 | – |
| Egypt | 102.7 [ | 15.0 [ | 19,111 [ | – | 1:5,400 | – |
| Hong Kong | 7.5 [ | 0.3 | 2,381 [ | 38 [ | 1:3,100 | 1:7,900 |
| India | 1,300.0 [ | 163.8 | 277,503 [ | 4,000 [ | 1: 41,100 | 1: 41,000 |
| Indonesia | 262.0 [ | 23.7 [ | 31,654 [ | 522 [ | 1:8,300 | 1:45,400 |
| Japan | 125.9 [ | 5.9 [ | 104,533 [ | – | 1:1,200 | – |
| Nigeria | 140.4 [ | 27.1 [ | 2,901 [ | – | 1:48,400 | – |
| Thailand | 66.6 [ | 4.0 [ | 15,951 [ | 527 [ | 1:4,200 | 1:7,600 |
| UK | 67.9 [ | 4.9 [ | 35,000 [ | 246 [ | 1:1,900 | 1:19,910 |
| USA | 330.0 [ | 23.2 [ | 200,500 [ | 8,000 [ | 1:1,600 | 1:2,900 |
| Venezuela | 27.2 [ | 2.4 | 17,000 [ | 93 [ | 1:1,600 | 1:25,800 |
0–4-year-old children,
0–6-year-old children,
Personal Communication: Email correspondence between Dr. Bathsheba Turton (Technical adviser) and Director of Oral Health Bureau, Ministry of Health, Cambodia, 23 September 2020.
Updated oral health policies related to ECC in each country/region.
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| Australia | Australia's National Oral Health Plan 2015–2024 | – Water fluoridation | – For children from lower income families |
| Brazil | Smiling Brazil National Oral Health Program (NOHP) since 2004 | – Water fluoridation | – Universal coverage |
| Cambodia | No national oral health program | – No national preventive measures | – No coverage |
| China | The National Program for Chronic Disease Control and Prevention (2017–2025), an action plan for the Healthy China 2030 | – Promote oral health education in kindergartens | – No coverage |
| Egypt | Social Health Insurance Law of 2018 to be fully implemented all over Egypt in 15-years offering Social Health Insurance Program (SHIP) | – Basic oral health package (health education with or without fluoride application) proposed under SHIP following evidence-based guidelines | – Currently, family Health units offer therapeutic care in a fee-for-service model at low prices and provide mostly extractions |
| Hong Kong | Oral Health Education Unit (OHEU) aims to improve the oral health status of Hong Kong preschool children since 1989 | – Water fluoridation with 100% coverage | – Only children of civil servants |
| India | No national oral health program | – No national preventive measures | – No coverage |
| Indonesia | The National Health Insurance (NHI) scheme 2014 | – Primary, secondary, and tertiary oral health care prevention schemes | – Universal coverage |
| Japan | The 8020 campaign (since 2000) | – Checkups at 6 months, 8 months, 1-year-old, 2-year-old, and an annual dental check-up at their kindergartens fissure sealants on primary molars | – Universal coverage |
| Nigeria | The 2020 National Oral Health Policy | – Promote access of pregnant women receive routine oral care | – Universal health coverage |
| Thailand | National Health Act | – Sugar taxation | – Universal health coverage including preventive restoration (SMART), simple treatment such as extraction, filling, etc. |
| UK | Child Dental Health Care under National Health Service (NHS) | – Oral health promotion (Childsmile, Scotland and Designed to Smile, Wales) | – Universal health coverage under NHS but different payment systems in each nation |
| USA | Medicaid and Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP) | – Water fluoridation | – Comprehensive dental coverage for families below the poverty level |
| Venezuela | No specific oral health policy | – Salt fluoridation | – No coverage |