Dental Caries Clinical Trial
Official title:
Reducing Disease Burden and Health Inequalities Arising From Chronic Dental Disease Among Indigenous Children: an Early Childhood Caries Intervention
The purpose of this study is to determine whether a combination of pre- and post-natal
preventive and behavioral interventions is effective in preventing early childhood caries in
Indigenous children.
Early childhood caries (ECC) causes profound suffering, frequently requiring expensive
treatment under a general anesthetic. It is associated with other chronic childhood
conditions such as otitis media and nutritional disorders, and is the strongest predictor of
poor oral health in adulthood. Despite ECC being entirely preventable, marked ECC
disparities exist between Indigenous and non-Indigenous children in Australia, New Zealand
and Canada. If the burden of ECC and associated oral health inequalities experienced by
Indigenous children in these nations are to be reduced, more needs to be done to ensure that
appropriate preventive measures, together with support for maintaining optimal oral health,
are provided to caregivers of such children in the early life stages. This will be an
interventional study, with all participants receiving the intervention benefits. Pregnant
Indigenous women residing in the three countries, their families and communities will be
included. The intervention will be implemented from birth and continue for the first three
years of a participating child's life. It will involve four components; dental care provided
to the mother during pregnancy, fluoride varnish applications for the child, oral health
anticipatory guidance and motivational interviewing. Following an Indigenous research
framework and methodology, the intervention will be tailored at the individual- or
family-level, with each caregiver or family progressing to the next level only when they are
ready. Developing a culturally-appropriate ECC intervention that aims to improve child oral
health, in full partnership with the Indigenous communities involved, will provide much
needed evidence for policy makers to address the challenge of improved oral health and
related outcomes for Indigenous children.
The study seeks to determine whether the implementation of a culturally-appropriate early
childhood caries intervention reduces dental disease burden and oral health inequalities
among Indigenous children. The study is part of a tri-nation research project entitled
"Reducing disease burden and health inequalities arising from chronic dental disease among
Indigenous children: an early childhood caries intervention", being simultaneously conducted
in Canada, Australia, and New Zealand. It was created in response to a Request for
Applications for the International Collaborative Indigenous Health Research Partnership
(ICIHRP) grant - a funding initiative of the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, the
Health Research Council of New Zealand and the National Health and Medical Research Council
of Australia.
The Baby Teeth Talk (BTT) Study, the Canadian arm of the project, is a community-based
participatory research project being conducted in partnership with Aboriginal communities
and organizations. BTT targets expectant mothers and their newborns, over a three-year
intervention period. BTT has successfully recruited over 500 pregnant First Nations and
Metis women living in urban and on-reserve communities in Ontario and Manitoba in the past
two and a half years. This 5-year study promotes and offers good dental care during
pregnancy and uses Motivational Interviewing (MI) and Anticipatory Guidance (AG) to counsel
mothers on caring for their children's teeth. Presently, study participants have all given
birth and fluoride varnish is being applied to their babies' teeth twice per year for 3
years by First Nations and non-First Nations community-based researchers associated with the
project. At the same time, mothers continue to receive MI and AG in an effort to address the
dietary and oral health concerns of their children. The goal of the study's multi-pronged
approach is to intervene early enough in the child's life to prevent the onset of early
childhood caries, or at least, reduce the rates of the disease to levels comparable to the
general Canadian population so that fewer Indigenous children require dental treatment under
general anesthesia.
The investigators have currently started the clinical oral examinations of the 2-year-old
participants to assess the effectiveness of the investigators pre- and post-natal preventive
and behavioral interventions to prevent caries in young Indigenous children. This is the
point when the investigators collect the primary outcome data for the investigators project.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Prevention
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