Early childhood caries: Are maternal psychosocial factors, decision-making ability, and caries status risk indicators for children in a sub-urban Nigerian population?

Abstract Objective Early childhood caries (ECC) is caries in children below the age of 72 months. The aim of the study was to determine the association of maternal psychosocial factors (general anxiety, dental anxiety, sense of coherence, parenting stress, fatalism, social support, depressive sympto...

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Main Authors: Michael Alade, Morenike Oluwatoyin Folayan, Maha El Tantawi, Ayodeji Babatunde Oginni, Abiola A. Adeniyi, Tracy L. Finlayson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-05-01
Series:BMC Oral Health
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12903-020-01324-y
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spelling doaj-dd02317faed04ee7b64a4de5c47a6f542021-05-09T11:40:00ZengBMCBMC Oral Health1472-68312021-05-0121111010.1186/s12903-020-01324-yEarly childhood caries: Are maternal psychosocial factors, decision-making ability, and caries status risk indicators for children in a sub-urban Nigerian population?Michael Alade0Morenike Oluwatoyin Folayan1Maha El Tantawi2Ayodeji Babatunde Oginni3Abiola A. Adeniyi4Tracy L. Finlayson5Obafemi Awolowo University Teaching Hospitals’ ComplexObafemi Awolowo UniversityFaculty of Dentistry, Alexandria UniversityInnovative AidLagos State University College of MedicineSchool of Public Health, San Diego State UniversityAbstract Objective Early childhood caries (ECC) is caries in children below the age of 72 months. The aim of the study was to determine the association of maternal psychosocial factors (general anxiety, dental anxiety, sense of coherence, parenting stress, fatalism, social support, depressive symptoms, and executive dysfunction), decision-making abilities, education, income and caries status with the prevalence and severity of ECC among children resident in Ile-Ife, Nigeria. Methods A dataset of 1549 mother–child (6–71-months-old) dyads collected through examinations and a household survey, using validated psychometric tools to measure the psychosocial factors, were analyzed. The DMFT for the mothers and the dmft for the child were determined. The association between maternal psychosocial factors, education, income, and decision-making ability, the prevalence of maternal caries, and the prevalence of ECC was determined using logistic regression analysis. Results The prevalence of maternal caries was 3.3%, and the mean (standard deviation-SD) DMFT was 0.10 (0.76). The ECC prevalence was 4.3%, and the mean (SD) dmft was 0.13 (0.92). There was no significant difference between the prevalence and severity of maternal caries and ECC by maternal age, education, income, or decision-making abilities. There was also no significant difference in maternal caries, ECC prevalence and ECC severity by maternal psychosocial factors. The only significant association was between the prevalence of caries in the mother and children: children whose mothers had caries were over six times more likely to have ECC than were children with mothers who had no caries (AOR: 6.67; 95% CI 3.23–13.79; p < 0.001). Conclusion The significant association between ECC and maternal caries prevalence suggests that prenatal oral health care for mothers may reduce the risk for ECC.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12903-020-01324-yGeneral anxietyDental anxietySense of coherenceEarly childhood cariesNigeria
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michael Alade
Morenike Oluwatoyin Folayan
Maha El Tantawi
Ayodeji Babatunde Oginni
Abiola A. Adeniyi
Tracy L. Finlayson
spellingShingle Michael Alade
Morenike Oluwatoyin Folayan
Maha El Tantawi
Ayodeji Babatunde Oginni
Abiola A. Adeniyi
Tracy L. Finlayson
Early childhood caries: Are maternal psychosocial factors, decision-making ability, and caries status risk indicators for children in a sub-urban Nigerian population?
BMC Oral Health
General anxiety
Dental anxiety
Sense of coherence
Early childhood caries
Nigeria
author_facet Michael Alade
Morenike Oluwatoyin Folayan
Maha El Tantawi
Ayodeji Babatunde Oginni
Abiola A. Adeniyi
Tracy L. Finlayson
author_sort Michael Alade
title Early childhood caries: Are maternal psychosocial factors, decision-making ability, and caries status risk indicators for children in a sub-urban Nigerian population?
title_short Early childhood caries: Are maternal psychosocial factors, decision-making ability, and caries status risk indicators for children in a sub-urban Nigerian population?
title_full Early childhood caries: Are maternal psychosocial factors, decision-making ability, and caries status risk indicators for children in a sub-urban Nigerian population?
title_fullStr Early childhood caries: Are maternal psychosocial factors, decision-making ability, and caries status risk indicators for children in a sub-urban Nigerian population?
title_full_unstemmed Early childhood caries: Are maternal psychosocial factors, decision-making ability, and caries status risk indicators for children in a sub-urban Nigerian population?
title_sort early childhood caries: are maternal psychosocial factors, decision-making ability, and caries status risk indicators for children in a sub-urban nigerian population?
publisher BMC
series BMC Oral Health
issn 1472-6831
publishDate 2021-05-01
description Abstract Objective Early childhood caries (ECC) is caries in children below the age of 72 months. The aim of the study was to determine the association of maternal psychosocial factors (general anxiety, dental anxiety, sense of coherence, parenting stress, fatalism, social support, depressive symptoms, and executive dysfunction), decision-making abilities, education, income and caries status with the prevalence and severity of ECC among children resident in Ile-Ife, Nigeria. Methods A dataset of 1549 mother–child (6–71-months-old) dyads collected through examinations and a household survey, using validated psychometric tools to measure the psychosocial factors, were analyzed. The DMFT for the mothers and the dmft for the child were determined. The association between maternal psychosocial factors, education, income, and decision-making ability, the prevalence of maternal caries, and the prevalence of ECC was determined using logistic regression analysis. Results The prevalence of maternal caries was 3.3%, and the mean (standard deviation-SD) DMFT was 0.10 (0.76). The ECC prevalence was 4.3%, and the mean (SD) dmft was 0.13 (0.92). There was no significant difference between the prevalence and severity of maternal caries and ECC by maternal age, education, income, or decision-making abilities. There was also no significant difference in maternal caries, ECC prevalence and ECC severity by maternal psychosocial factors. The only significant association was between the prevalence of caries in the mother and children: children whose mothers had caries were over six times more likely to have ECC than were children with mothers who had no caries (AOR: 6.67; 95% CI 3.23–13.79; p < 0.001). Conclusion The significant association between ECC and maternal caries prevalence suggests that prenatal oral health care for mothers may reduce the risk for ECC.
topic General anxiety
Dental anxiety
Sense of coherence
Early childhood caries
Nigeria
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12903-020-01324-y
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