Implementing Public Health Interventions to Reduce Caries Prevalence

By Christine M. Farrell, RDH, BSDH, MPA and Jill Moore, RDH, EdD, MHA, BSDH


Dental caries, although highly preventable, remains one of the most prevalent chronic childhood diseases in children in the United States. Currently, 20% of children between the ages of 5 and 11, and 13% of adolescents have at least one tooth with active dental decay. Although caries is preventable with education and access to dental care, these solutions are widely unavailable because children residing in low-income families, who most often face access-to-care barriers, are twice as likely to experience decay. Evidence also shows that racial minorities experience the greatest burden of oral diseases. Performing assessments, adopting policies, and assuring access to care are core public health measures to help combat dental decay.

* References can be found in the original article via the link below.
Read Article

CONTRIBUTE: Are you interested in contributing to the student website? Click here to submit an article idea!

Related Articles

Responses

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.