Framing Young Childrens Oral Health: A Participatory Action Research Project.

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES:Despite the widespread acknowledgement of the importance of childhood oral health, little progress has been made in preventing early childhood caries. Limited information exists regarding specific daily-life and community-related factors that impede optimal oral hygiene, di...

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Main Authors: Chimere C Collins, Laura Villa-Torres, Lattice D Sams, Leslie P Zeldin, Kimon Divaris
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2016-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4993516?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-d672ee302ce745f89feb07961a42a0592020-11-24T21:09:43ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032016-01-01118e016172810.1371/journal.pone.0161728Framing Young Childrens Oral Health: A Participatory Action Research Project.Chimere C CollinsLaura Villa-TorresLattice D SamsLeslie P ZeldinKimon DivarisBACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES:Despite the widespread acknowledgement of the importance of childhood oral health, little progress has been made in preventing early childhood caries. Limited information exists regarding specific daily-life and community-related factors that impede optimal oral hygiene, diet, care, and ultimately oral health for children. We sought to understand what parents of young children consider important and potentially modifiable factors and resources influencing their children's oral health, within the contexts of the family and the community. METHODS:This qualitative study employed Photovoice among 10 English-speaking parents of infants and toddlers who were clients of an urban WIC clinic in North Carolina. The primary research question was: "What do you consider as important behaviors, as well as family and community resources to prevent cavities among young children?" Five group sessions were conducted and they were recorded, transcribed verbatim and analyzed using qualitative research methodology. Inductive analyses were based on analytical summaries, double-coding, and summary matrices and were done using Atlas.ti.7.5.9 software. FINDINGS:Good oral health was associated with avoidance of problems or restorations for the participants. Financial constraints affected healthy food and beverage choices, as well as access to oral health care. Time constraints and occasional frustration related to children's oral hygiene emerged as additional barriers. Establishment of rules/routines and commitment to them was a successful strategy to promote their children's oral health, as well as modeling of older siblings, cooperation among caregivers and peer support. Community programs and organizations, social hubs including playgrounds, grocery stores and social media emerged as promising avenues for gaining support and sharing resources. CONCLUSIONS:Low-income parents of young children are faced with daily life struggles that interfere with oral health and care. Financial constraints are pervasive, but parents identified several strategies involving home care and community agents that can be helpful. Future interventions aimed to improve children's oral health must take into consideration the role of families and the communities in which they live.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4993516?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Chimere C Collins
Laura Villa-Torres
Lattice D Sams
Leslie P Zeldin
Kimon Divaris
spellingShingle Chimere C Collins
Laura Villa-Torres
Lattice D Sams
Leslie P Zeldin
Kimon Divaris
Framing Young Childrens Oral Health: A Participatory Action Research Project.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Chimere C Collins
Laura Villa-Torres
Lattice D Sams
Leslie P Zeldin
Kimon Divaris
author_sort Chimere C Collins
title Framing Young Childrens Oral Health: A Participatory Action Research Project.
title_short Framing Young Childrens Oral Health: A Participatory Action Research Project.
title_full Framing Young Childrens Oral Health: A Participatory Action Research Project.
title_fullStr Framing Young Childrens Oral Health: A Participatory Action Research Project.
title_full_unstemmed Framing Young Childrens Oral Health: A Participatory Action Research Project.
title_sort framing young childrens oral health: a participatory action research project.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2016-01-01
description BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES:Despite the widespread acknowledgement of the importance of childhood oral health, little progress has been made in preventing early childhood caries. Limited information exists regarding specific daily-life and community-related factors that impede optimal oral hygiene, diet, care, and ultimately oral health for children. We sought to understand what parents of young children consider important and potentially modifiable factors and resources influencing their children's oral health, within the contexts of the family and the community. METHODS:This qualitative study employed Photovoice among 10 English-speaking parents of infants and toddlers who were clients of an urban WIC clinic in North Carolina. The primary research question was: "What do you consider as important behaviors, as well as family and community resources to prevent cavities among young children?" Five group sessions were conducted and they were recorded, transcribed verbatim and analyzed using qualitative research methodology. Inductive analyses were based on analytical summaries, double-coding, and summary matrices and were done using Atlas.ti.7.5.9 software. FINDINGS:Good oral health was associated with avoidance of problems or restorations for the participants. Financial constraints affected healthy food and beverage choices, as well as access to oral health care. Time constraints and occasional frustration related to children's oral hygiene emerged as additional barriers. Establishment of rules/routines and commitment to them was a successful strategy to promote their children's oral health, as well as modeling of older siblings, cooperation among caregivers and peer support. Community programs and organizations, social hubs including playgrounds, grocery stores and social media emerged as promising avenues for gaining support and sharing resources. CONCLUSIONS:Low-income parents of young children are faced with daily life struggles that interfere with oral health and care. Financial constraints are pervasive, but parents identified several strategies involving home care and community agents that can be helpful. Future interventions aimed to improve children's oral health must take into consideration the role of families and the communities in which they live.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4993516?pdf=render
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