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Social inequalities in oral health: from evidence to action. In: Watt RG, Listl S, Peres M, Heilmann A (eds). : International Centre for Oral Health Inequalities Research & Policy. UCL; 2015
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Childsmile after 10 years part 1: background, theory and principles

From Volume 46, Issue 2, February 2019 | Pages 113-116

Authors

Lorna MD Macpherson

Professor of Dental Public Health, School of Medicine, Dentistry and Nursing, University of Glasgow

Articles by Lorna MD Macpherson

Jennifer Rodgers

Consultant in Dental Public Health, NHS Forth Valley, Stirling Road, Larbert FK5 4WR, Scotland

Articles by Jennifer Rodgers

David I Conway

Professor of Dental Public Health, School of Medicine, Dentistry and Nursing, University of Glasgow, UK

Articles by David I Conway

Abstract

Abstract: Childsmile is the national child oral health improvement programme for Scotland. It was developed as pilots from 2006/7 in response to the public health challenge of poor child oral health. Childsmile recognizes the importance of the social determinants of health, and takes common risk factor and proportionate universal approaches to deliver complex multifaceted interventions in multiple settings and by multidisciplinary teams.

CPD/Clinical Relevance: This paper describes the theory and principles associated with the development and implementation of Childsmile.

Article

Dental caries is one of the most prevalent diseases of childhood. In the UK, it continues to be the commonest reason for an elective hospital procedure under general anaesthesia in children under 18 years.1

A traditional biomedical model of dental caries has been well documented. Intra-orally, the following factors play an important role:

It is often stated that caries can, to a large extent, be prevented or controlled at the sub-clinical level, substantially improving quality of life and child morbidity. From a biological perspective, this involves sugar and biofilm control, and ensuring fluoride bio-availability.

In the United Kingdom, trends in child dental caries rates declined rapidly from the 1970s to the late 1980s, attributed to the introduction and widespread use of fluoride toothpaste during this period. However, by the 1990s, these improvements had slowed and inequalities in dental health were becoming very apparent, with those from the lowest socioeconomic groups bearing the greatest burden.

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