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An oral health promotion program for an urban minority population of preschool children
Rosamund L. Harrison and Tracy Wong
 Division of Pediatric Dentistry, Faculty of Dentistry, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada
Correspondence to Rosamund L. Harrison, Division of Pediatric Dentistry,
University of British Columbia, 2199 Wesbrook Mall, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada V6T 1Z3
e-mail: rosha@interchange.ubc.ca

 Sources of support: B. C. Health Research Foundation Grant #MH34 (92); Community Health Innovation Fund, Vancouver/Richmond Health Board; Sharon Martin Community Health Trust Fund.

Copyright © Blackwell Munksgaard 2003
KEYWORDS
dental caries • prevention and control • dental health promotion • ethnology dentition • preventive dentistry • primary health education • Vietnam
Rosamund L. Harrison, Tracy Wong. An oral health promotion program for an urban minority population of preschool children. Community Dent Oral Epidemiol 2003; 31: 392–9. © Blackwell Munksgaard, 2003

ABSTRACT

Abstract – The objective of this project was to design, implement and evaluate an oral health promotion program for inner-city Vietnamese preschool children in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. The project comprised of four general phases: information-gathering, project planning, project implementation, and project evaluation. The information-gathering phase of the project demonstrated extensive tooth decay in young children, bottle use during the day and during sleep-time long past recommended weaning age, and a belief of many parents that primary teeth were not important. Based on this information, the project planning committee designed a program that featured one-to-one counseling supported by community-wide activities. A Vietnamese lay health counselor provided counseling to mothers with telephone follow-up that coincided with scheduled infant immunization visits to a twice-monthly Child Health Clinic for Vietnamese families. At all the follow-up assessment clinics scheduled over the 7-year duration of this continuing project, mothers who had had more than one counseling visit reported significantly less use of sleep-time and daytime bottles for their children, and their children demonstrated significantly reduced prevalence of caries compared to similarly aged children at baseline. One-to-one counseling with regular follow-up provided by a lay person of similar background and culture to the participants is an effective way to facilitate adoption of healthy behaviors and to improve oral health of children.


Submitted 14 June 2002;
accepted 12 November 2002

DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1034/j.1600-0528.2003.00001.x About DOI

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