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Coordinated Oral Health Promotion (CO-OP) Chicago

Watumiaji waliosajiliwa tu ndio wanaweza kutafsiri nakala
Ingia / Ingia
Kiungo kimehifadhiwa kwenye clipboard
HaliInatumika, sio kuajiri
Wadhamini
University of Illinois at Chicago

Maneno muhimu

Kikemikali

This study assesses the impact of oral health promotion delivered by community health workers in medical clinics, Women, Infants and Children (WIC) centers, and family homes. Investigators will assess oral health behaviors in children aged 0 to 3.

Maelezo

Dental caries is the most common chronic disease of childhood; an estimated 28% of children nationally aged 5 years and below have untreated dental disease. Pediatric dental caries are associated with pain, more severe infections, malnutrition, speech difficulties, poor school performance, cosmetic problems, and an overall lower quality of life. Similar to other chronic diseases, oral health disparities are seen with higher caries prevalence and worse outcomes in children from low income urban families and in children of African American and Latino ethnicity. These disparities have been demonstrated locally in Chicago. Many interventions have been implemented to attempt to reverse these disparities. Some involve public policy (fluorinated water), some are educational campaigns targeting individuals, while others focus on providing increased education and services through primary healthcare providers. Many of these programs have demonstrated efficacy but the disparities in oral health persist. The investigators propose this is because the interventions to date do not target the family as a whole and also have not targeted multiple levels simultaneously.

COordinated Oral health Promotion (CO-OP) Chicago brings together a team of clinical pediatricians and dentists, health researchers, and policy experts to rigorously test the ability of multiple oral health promotion interventions, both alone and in combination, to improve child and family oral health. The primary intervention is family-focused education and support from community health workers (CHWs). CO-OP Chicago will test the impact of a family-focused CHW intervention for oral health promotion when applied in clinical, community, and home settings. The primary study objective is to evaluate the efficacy of a one-year oral health CHW intervention, compared to usual care, to improve self-reported brushing frequency and observed plaque score in low income urban children under the age of 3 years old. The study's exploratory aim is to determine if the oral health CHW intervention impact on child tooth brushing behaviors varies when the CHWs are based out of a medical clinic compared to a community WIC center.

Tarehe

Imethibitishwa Mwisho: 05/31/2020
Iliyowasilishwa Kwanza: 12/21/2017
Uandikishaji uliokadiriwa Uliwasilishwa: 01/09/2018
Iliyotumwa Kwanza: 01/11/2018
Sasisho la Mwisho Liliwasilishwa: 06/04/2020
Sasisho la Mwisho Lilichapishwa: 06/08/2020
Tarehe halisi ya kuanza kwa masomo: 01/11/2018
Tarehe ya Kukamilisha Msingi iliyokadiriwa: 08/19/2020
Tarehe ya Kukamilisha Utafiti: 08/30/2020

Hali au ugonjwa

Dental Caries in Children
Health Behavior
Healthcare Disparities

Uingiliaji / matibabu

Behavioral: CHW Arm

Awamu

-

Vikundi vya Arm

MkonoUingiliaji / matibabu
Experimental: CHW Arm
The intervention is community health worker (CHW) services. CHWs trained in oral health will be assigned to half of the sites. Participants in these sites will be offered four in-person visits and follow-up phone calls over 12-months. These visits can occur at the location of the family's preference (recruitment site, home, or mutually-agreed upon other location). A core curriculum of oral health topics will be covered during visits, with an emphasis on developing and sustaining healthy oral health management routines for the entire family.
Behavioral: CHW Arm
CHWs are non-clinical people who provide education, care coordination, and support to families.
No Intervention: Wait-list Control Arm
This arm will receive usual care. After completion of the final data collection at one year, participants and sites allotted to this arm will be offered CHW services.

Vigezo vya Kustahiki

Zama zinazostahiki Kujifunza 6 Months Kwa 6 Months
Jinsia Inastahiki KujifunzaAll
Hupokea Wajitolea wa AfyaNdio
Vigezo

Inclusion Criteria:

Caregiver:

- Provide a signed and dated informed consent form

- Age 18 or older

- Be the primary caregiver of a child age 6-36 months old. The primary caregiver is defined for this study as the person (or one of the people) who is consistently responsible for the child's daily routines and who is a legal guardian.

- If a child lives in multiple households, the caregiver must live with the child at least 5 days of the week.

- The child must be an active patient/client in the clinic/center where recruited.

- Speak English or Spanish

- Willing to comply with all study procedures and be available for the duration of the study

Child:

- Age 6-36 months old

- An active patient/client in the clinic/center where recruited

- A minimum of two fully erupted central maxillary incisors

Exclusion Criteria:

- Child with medical condition that limits his or her ability to conduct the study activities (such as severe developmental or cognitive delay, ventilator or oxygen dependence, oral aversion, severe facial deformities)

- Anything that would place the individual at increased risk or preclude the individual's full compliance with or completion of the study

- Anything that would place the research or intervention staff at increased risk

Matokeo

Hatua za Matokeo ya Msingi

1. Parent-reported tooth brushing frequency [12-months post-randomization]

parents will be asked how often the child's teeth are brushed

2. Child dental plaque score [12-months post-randomization]

Disclosing solution is applied to child's teeth, images are taken, and plaque score is determined using the Oral health Index - Maxillary Incisor Score (OHI-MIS)

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