The objective of the present study was to determine the caries experience of schoolchildren aged 7-12 years from the Southeast area of São Paulo State, Brazil, in 1998, according to town size and fluoridation status. Data for this cross-sectional study were based on the data bank from the Epidemiological Survey of São Paulo State provided by the State Health Department. After stratification by fluoridation status and town size, 29 towns were randomly selected to represent the Southeast area of São Paulo State, Brazil, and a total of 13,480 schoolchildren were randomly selected for this study. Calibrated dentists performed dinical examinations according to the WHO criteria. Caries experience and prevalence were significantly lower in fluoridated areas (1.9 DMFT, 2.1 dmft, 20% caries free) than in non-fluoridated areas (2.4 DMFT, 2.4 dmft, 13% caries free). According to town size, DMFT and caries prevalence were significantly higher in small towns (2.3 DMFT, 13% caries free), followed by medium-sized (2.1 DMFT, 17% caries free) and large cities (1.6 DMFT, 27% caries free). Among 12-year-old children, caries prevalence was predominantly moderate or high in small and medium-sized municipalities, whereas in large cities it was moderate or low. The results suggest that water fluoridation is an essential public health measure and that town size may affect caries distribution in the Southeast area of São Paulo State.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00016350410006383 | DOI Listing |
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!