| Literature DB >> 35717199 |
Navira Chandio1,2,3,4, Sowbhagya Micheal1, Santosh Kumar Tadakmadla5, Woosung Sohn6, Susan Cartwright7, Rhiannon White3, Prathyusha Sanagavarapu4,8, Jinal Shashin Parmar2,3, Amit Arora9,10,11,12,13.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Untreated dental caries negatively impacts a child's quality of life including overall health and wellbeing, growth and development, social interaction ability, and school attendance. School-based toothbrushing programs have been recognised as an effective intervention to reduce the burden of dental caries. However, limited information is available to understand the real-world enablers and challenges in the implementation and sustainability of toothbrushing programs. This review aims to understand the barriers and enablers in the implementation and sustainability of toothbrushing programs in early childhood settings and primary schools.Entities:
Keywords: Barriers; Child; Daycare; Dental caries; Enablers; Oral hygiene; Preschool; Schools; Toothbrushing
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35717199 PMCID: PMC9206278 DOI: 10.1186/s12903-022-02270-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Oral Health ISSN: 1472-6831 Impact factor: 3.747
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram showing identification of studies via databases
Characteristics of included studies
| Author, year, (country) | Study aims | Study setting and methods | Participants | Outcome | Limitations | Funding source | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Enablers | Barriers | ||||||
| Dimitropoulos et al. (Australia) [ | Possible challenges and barriers in continuation of school tooth brushing program | Primary schools; Focus groups | School staff and oral health aide | -Positive attitude, acceptability, and adaptability -Local school staff and oral health aides infection control training, -Classroom-based toothbrushing activities, -Authoritative school staff, -Strong local school leadership, -Flexibility of program implementation timings -Program acceptability and children acceptance of lunchtime tooth brushing | -Whole school toothbrushing activity -In-cooperation of the program in school daily routine (initial concern) -Older age children program acceptability issues, -Resistance of early morning toothbrushing -Mishandling of toothpaste | -One school did not consent for focus groups -Teacher’s response influenced by program supportive environment -Increased local community participation (community collaborative implementation approach) | Not given |
| Yusuf et al. (England) [ | Identifying barriers and enablers in fluoride varnish and toothbrushing programs implementation | Primary School; semi-structured interviews | Health champions (volunteers), general dental practitioners, and school staff | -Children’s participation in toothbrushing activities (79.2%) -Adaptation of various parental consent approaches -Improve parents program engagement with the assistance of health champions (program Somali community volunteers’) -Program protocol development aimed at schools for facilitation of implementation -Program implementation flexible timelines -Adequate sharing of information among school staff -Program information translation in Arabic and Somali languages for parents -Acceptability of health-promoting schools and by volunteers (Health Champions) and the dental team | -Frustrated due to internal organizational factors, time, and space issues | -It was a pilot study and results cannot be generalised to a wider population | Not specified |
| Glaser-Ammann et al. (Switzerland) [ | Parents knowledge and attitude towards school dental health programs | Early childhood setting, questionnaire-based surveys | Parents-children’s dyads | -72% of parents accepted the importance of school dental programs in preschools -72% attended the prophylaxis programs -One fourth (25%) of the parents reported the dental health instructor as the best teacher for children toothbrushing learning skills -One fifth (20%) believe school dental instructor is also the right person to teach a healthy diet -Parents of children who were caries-free were more intended to participate in school dental programs ( -The statistically non-significant association was observed between parents' attendance in school dental health program and their educational level ( -60% believes that their child has benefitted from the program and now brush their teeth better -Just 36% reported that their child consumed healthy mid-morning snacks after the school dental health programs | -Parents assumed that the kindergarten teacher’s role in teaching toothbrushing skills is not important | -Study design limits the study statistical analysis to be considered explorative, and regression analysis and Bonferroni corrections were performed | Not given |
| Woodall et al. (UK) [ | Toothbrushing intervention effectiveness and process issues related to its coordination and delivery | Early childhood setting; case studies, interviews, surveys | Parents, children, school staff, oral health promotors | -Acceptability of the program -Role of teaching support workers as the main contact point of program co-ordination with oral health promoters, -Linking toothbrushing intervention with school educational curriculum, -Training of school staff, -Provision of adequate information to parents along with children's weekly oral hygiene updates -Engagement and acceptability of program, -Ripple effect | -Increased workload, -School committed staff frequent turnover, -Role of teacher’s as pseudo-parent -Lack of engagement and participation, -Lack of awareness, Toothbrushes storage and hygiene issues (initial concern) | -Participants sample size issue in each of the data gathering approach -Survey didn’t include all schools -Sample size of case studies was not representative of the school population -Limited number of students participated in drawing activities due to lack of parental consent | Not given |
| Natapav et al. (Israel) [ | Factors associated with continuation of supervised toothbrushing program | Early childhood setting; telephonic surveys | School Teachers | -Teachers’ positive attitudes (70%) -Program acceptability (96%) --Willingness to teach toothbrushing skills (85%) and enjoying teaching toothbrushing skills (20%) -Correlation between Teachers' willingness for the continuation of the program with their belief in program success (r = 0.73), acceptance of their role of teaching toothbrushing skills to children (r = 0.53), and enjoying teaching toothbrushing (r = 0.59) -Statistically significant ( -84% of teachers reported that children like to learn toothbrushing skills | -Teachers anticipated more barriers were associated with their unwillingness for the program continuation (r = − 0.34) -Thirty percent of teachers think its parent's role to train children in toothbrushing skills -Statistically significant ( | Not reported | Ministry of Health (MOH) |
| Nyandindi et al. (Tanzania) [ | Assessment of teachers'-led factors in the oral health educational programs activities | Primary schools, surveys and interviews, teachers’ oral examination and practical exercises | Teachers | -Twenty-four percent of teachers had taught about diet in the class, without mentioning the association between tooth decay and diet -Most of the teachers prefer to teach toothbrushing theoretically and perceive it a parent’s responsibility to teach their kids toothbrushing skills -Teachers claimed that the association between diet and tooth decay is not part of the health lesson curriculum of grade one class -Teachers complained of insufficient material and time to teach health lessons in the overly packed class of children (mean [SD]: 65 +/− 27 students) -Eleven percent of teachers perceived the need for further training in oral health education -Only 26% of teachers had skills of making wooden toothbrush -School administration rarely inquired about the health lessons conducted in schools | Not given | Not given | |
Characteristics of the oral health promotional programs
| Author, year (country) | Program type | Target group/community | Program target age | Program resource provision to schools | Toothbrushing Supervision | Program toothbrushing activities |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dimitropoulos et al. (Australia) [ | School-based toothbrushing program | Aboriginal community | 5–12 years | -At the beginning of term children were provided with a toothbrush kit (including toothpaste, toothbrush, and storage container) for in-school resources storage -Free toothpaste and toothbrushes on quarterly basis | (1) Teachers in two schools (2) Teachers and oral health aide (older student) in one school | -Once daily toothbrushing with a fluoride toothpaste at the flexibility of school timing. Usually after breakfast club or during reading activity |
| Yusuf et al. (England) [ | Fluoride application and toothbrushing program | Deprived area of London | 3–7 years | Not specified | Tooth champions from school staff | -Fluoride application and tooth brushing sessions at schools |
| Glaser-Ammann et al. (Switzerland) [ | School Dental Health Program | Generally, in Winterthur preschools | 4–5 years | Not mentioned | Schools dental care instructors | -Tooth brushing exercises with high fluoridated gels |
| Woodall et al. (UK) [ | School-based toothbrushing program | Underprivileged communities of Northern England-Yorkshire and Humber region | 3–5 years | -Toothbrushes, toothpaste, and toothbrush storage facility | School Staff | -School toothbrushing activities at breakfast |
| Natapov et al. (Israel) [ | School-based supervised toothbrushing program | Nation-wide program in all nurseries | 3–4 years | -Toothbrushing storage facility and all the necessary resources | Teachers | -Daily toothbrushing at schools |
| Nyandindi et al. (Tanzania) [ | School-based oral health educational programs | Both urban and rural schools in Tanzania | 7-12 years | Not specified | Teachers | -Health lessons as a part of the school curriculum -Health lessons (including oral health)1 h per week - In-school wooden toothbrush development -Teaching toothbrushing techniques |