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An exploratory trial implementing a community-based child oral health promotion intervention for Australian families from refugee and migrant backgrounds: a protocol paper for Teeth Tales

Authors :
Veronika Pradel
Andrea de Silva
Lisa Gold
Christine Armit
Richard G. Watt
Laurence Moore
Michal Morris
Lisa Gibbs
Britt Johnson
Mandy Truong
Dana Young
Mark Gussy
Elizabeth Waters
Hanny Calache
Iqbal Gondal
Bradley Christian
Maryanne Tadic
Elisha Riggs
Source :
BMJ Open
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
BMJ Publishing Group, 2014.

Abstract

Introduction Inequalities are evident in early childhood caries rates with the socially disadvantaged experiencing greater burden of disease. This study builds on formative qualitative research, conducted in the Moreland/Hume local government areas of Melbourne, Victoria 2006–2009, in response to community concerns for oral health of children from refugee and migrant backgrounds. Development of the community-based intervention described here extends the partnership approach to cogeneration of contemporary evidence with continued and meaningful involvement of investigators, community, cultural and government partners. This trial aims to establish a model for child oral health promotion for culturally diverse communities in Australia. Methods and analysis This is an exploratory trial implementing a community-based child oral health promotion intervention for Australian families from refugee and migrant backgrounds. Families from an Iraqi, Lebanese or Pakistani background with children aged 1–4 years, residing in metropolitan Melbourne, were invited to participate in the trial by peer educators from their respective communities using snowball and purposive sampling techniques. Target sample size was 600. Moreland, a culturally diverse, inner-urban metropolitan area of Melbourne, was chosen as the intervention site. The intervention comprised peer educator led community oral health education sessions and reorienting of dental health and family services through cultural Competency Organisational Review (CORe). Ethics and dissemination Ethics approval for this trial was granted by the University of Melbourne Human Research Ethics Committee and the Department of Education and Early Childhood Development Research Committee. Study progress and output will be disseminated via periodic newsletters, peer-reviewed research papers, reports, community seminars and at National and International conferences. Trial registration number Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry (ACTRN12611000532909).

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20446055
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
BMJ Open
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a861a7e116da0671c4dd3335059cb294