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Oral Health Policies to Tackle the Burden of Early Childhood Caries: A Review of 14 Countries/Regions

Authors :
Jieyi Chen
Duangporn Duangthip
Sherry Shiqian Gao
Fang Huang
Robert Anthonappa
Branca Heloisa Oliveira
Bathsheba Turton
Callum Durward
Maha El Tantawi
Dina Attia
Masahiro Heima
Murugan Satta Muthu
Diah Ayu Maharani
Morenik Oluwatoyin Folayan
Prathip Phantumvanit
Thanya Sitthisettapong
Nicola Innes
Yasmi O. Crystal
Francisco Ramos-Gomez
Aida Carolina Medina
Edward Chin Man Lo
Chun Hung Chu
Source :
Frontiers in Oral Health, Vol 2 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Frontiers Media S.A., 2021.

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.Results: The findings indicated that ECC prevalence varied in different countries/regions. The lowest prevalence of ECC among 5-year-old children was found in Nigeria (7%), and the highest was found in Indonesia (90%). The existing dental workforce and resources are limited in most countries. The smallest dentist to population ratio was reported by Nigeria at 1:48,400, whereas the highest ratio was in Brazil (1:600). Out of 14, three (21%) countries namely India, Venezuela and Cambodia had no national oral health policies addressing ECC and four (29%) countries (Cambodia, China, India, Venezuela) had no publicly funded dental care program for 0–5-year-old children. Water fluoridation is available in four countries/regions (Australia, Brazil, Hong Kong, USA).Conclusion: ECC remains a global health challenge and dental workforce is limited. National/regional programs to tackle ECC are not yet prioritized in many countries/regions. Evidence to support demonstration projects is limited. Further research on the cost-effectiveness of interventions strategies is required for policymakers.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
26734842
Volume :
2
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Frontiers in Oral Health
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.721b2dcab4448fb8ff04205ab9be5a2
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3389/froh.2021.670154