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Oral Health Promotion Among Preschool Children With Special Needs

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Developmental Disorders
Down Syndrome
Epilepsy
Learning Disorders
Developmental Delay
Intellectual Disability
Cerebral Palsy
Autistic Spectrum Disorders
Developmental Disability
Interventions
Other: Visual pedagogy (social stories)
Other: Conventional leaflets
Registration Number
NCT03522337
Lead Sponsor
The University of Hong Kong
Brief Summary

Establishing good oral health-related habit is challenging among younger children, especially for preschool children with special needs, as they have physical, mental, sensory, behavioural, emotional, and chronic medical conditions that requires health care beyond the routines. Existing evidences showed that children with special needs have poorer oral health status and more challenging behaviours than their counterparts in main stream schools. Visual pedagogy, such as social stories, have been applied to teach a variety of skills or behaviours to individuals with special needs. They are short stories demonstrating the target skill or behaviour, and then the readers are expected to perform the target skill or behaviour following the demonstrations. Giving the evidence that children with special needs can understand complex situations and learn new practices by using those stories, we expect to apply a package of structured social stories to modify oral health-related behaviours (tooth brushing, healthy eating, dental visit), and thereby, improve oral health status among preschool children with special needs. Establishment of good oral-health related behaviours in early childhood will benefits children in their future life. Additionally, visual pedagogy-assisted oral health education is relatively easy and safe to implement. If proven effective, social story-based preventive care can be recommended to special children globally.

Detailed Description

Early childhood caries (ECC) is reported to be the most prevalent childhood disease. It is a chronic, infectious dental disease affecting children aged between birth and 71 months. Untreated ECC can lead to toothache, swelling, abscess, immature loss of primary teeth, and thereby, significant impacts on children's physical and emotional status. Nowadays, ECC has been recognised as a serious public health problem in developing as well as developed countries. Although ECC has a complex aetiology, existing evidence reveals that tooth brushing, appropriate eating habits, and regular dental check-ups are effective in preventing the development of ECC.

In this study, oral health education will be reinforced by a series of visual education materials (social stories or conventional leaflets), which covering the three topics in ECC prevention, namely "tooth brushing", "healthy diets", and "dental visit". Sample size calculation is performed by the program G\* power 3.1.9.2. The primary outcome is the development of new dental caries over the 24-month study period. Clinical oral examinations will be performed according to the following criteria: i) Caries experiences were assessed by the International Caries Detection and Assessment System(ICDAS); ii) Oral hygiene status by Simplified oral hygiene index of Greene and Vermilion (OHI-S); iii) gingival health status by Modified Gingival Index of Lobene (MGI). Dental examination will be performed at Special Child Care Centres by a paediatric dentist with a disposable mouth-mirror attached to an LED light. Tell- Show-Do (TSD) technique will be used to improve children's cooperation level. Tooth-brushing performance will be assessed by two observers. After dental examination and tooth-brushing assessment, a standard hands-on tooth-brushing training will be provided immediately to each child and his/her parent. Oral health instruction will also be illustrated to the participants, reinforced by social stories (experiment group) or conventional leaflets (control group). Questionnaires regarding children's oral health related behaviours and family demographic information will be completed by parents, while children's developmental profile will be assessed by staff in Special Child Care Centres. Children' oral health status and expected behaviours (tooth brushing, healthy eating habits and dental-visit experience) will be assessed at 6-month, 12-month and 24-month intervals.

All the data will be analysed using IBM SPSS. Continuous valuables such as dmft, dmfs, S-OHI, MGI scores between the control and test groups will be analysed by two-sample t test, paired-t test, Mann-Whitney Test when appropriate. Chi-square statistics will be used to assess the differences in categorical variables between control group and test group, such as caries incidence, tooth-brushing frequencies, snacking frequencies, and dental-visit frequencies. McNemar's test will be used to analyse whether children's oral-health related behaviours will be changed before and after intervention. Regression analyses will be conducted to determine potential factors associated with children's oral health status or oral-health related behaviours in the model. The significance levels will be set to be P \< 0.05.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
306
Inclusion Criteria
  • Preschool-aged children in Special Child Care Centres or special schools in Hong Kong
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Exclusion Criteria
  • With severe visually impaired, severe hearing impaired (cannot hear dentists' or parents' instruction); severe physical disabled (cannot hold a toothbrush); requiring emergent dental treatment; use of antibiotic within 3 months; dental prophylaxes in the last 6 months.
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Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Test groupVisual pedagogy (social stories)The main intervention is visual pedagogy (social stories). Tooth-brushing training (toothbrushes and toothpastes provided) and oral health instruction are reinforced by social stories.
Control groupConventional leafletsThe main intervention is conventional leaflets. Tooth-brushing training (toothbrushes and toothpastes provided) and oral health instruction are reinforced by leaflets.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Change in carious tooth surfaces over course of the trialThe change from baseline to 24 months

Assessed by the International Caries Detection and Assessment System(ICDAS)

Change in the prevalence of dental cariesThe change from baseline to 24 months

Measured by dmft index (decayed, missing due to caries, and filled primary teeth)

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Toothbrush wear6 months, 12 months, 24 months

Assessed by toothbrush wear index (Rawls,1989)

Change in children's eating habits12 months, 24 months

Questionnaires regarding children's oral health-related eating habits will be completed by parents

Change in oral hygiene status6 months, 12 months, 24 months

Assessed by simplified oral hygiene index (S-OHI)

Change in gingival status6 months, 12 months, 24 months

Assessed by modified gingival index (MGI)

Change in children's dental-visit experience24 months

Questionnaires regarding children's dental-visit experience will be completed by parents

Change in children's tooth-brushing performance6 months, 12 months, 24 months

Observed and assessed by investigators using the step-based assessment tool, and tooth-brushing duration will be recorded by a timer

The amount of toothpasteImmediately after dentists demonstrating the appropriate amount of toothpaste for children younger than 6 years old

The weight of toothpaste dispensed by parents and/or children during tooth-brushing training

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Dental Faculty, The University of Hong Kong

🇨🇳

Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China

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