AI Article Synopsis

  • Dental caries is a significant health issue among children globally, and the study aims to analyze trends in deciduous (baby) teeth caries in Iran from 1990 to 2017 to inform effective interventions.
  • The research examined national oral health surveys and utilized statistical models to assess increases in dental caries, revealing that 22% of children had caries in 1990, which rose to over 15% by 2017, predominantly due to untreated decay.
  • The findings indicate an urgent need for improved oral health policies and interventions in Iran, including strategies like supervised tooth brushing and better dietary practices to combat rising dental caries rates among children.

Article Abstract

Background: Dental caries is the most prevalent child affliction in the world and can be reduced through effective preventive interventions. To plan cost-effective interventions, clear and integrated data are needed. This study has been designed to overcome the lack of national trend in deciduous dental caries in Iran.

Objective: To estimate the dental caries trend in deciduous teeth in the Iranian population at different ages from 1990 to 2017.

Methods: From 1990 to 2017 a literature search about dmf and its components (decayed, missed, and filled tooth, abbreviated as dt, mt, and ft) as well as dental caries was done in the Iranian population in three English (PubMed, Web of Science, and Scopus) and three national databases (in Persian). All eligible national oral health surveys in these 28 years were included. National dmft data were categorised based on age (1-4, 5-9, and 10-14), sex, province and year. The final trends were estimated using an age-spatio-temporal hierarchical model. We used the bootstrap method in multilevel models to predict the uncertainty interval (UI) of the modelled results. Finally, the estimations of dmft, dt, mt, and ft with a 95% UI were reported from 1990 to 2017.

Results: Almost 22% of the Iranian deciduous teeth were involved with dental caries in 1990 [dmft = 4.37; (95% UI 2.23, 6.62)] which more than 83% of it was dt [3.64 (1.53, 5.88)] and less than 7% was ft [0.30 (0.06, 0.65)]. During 1990-2017, dmft increased by more than 15% [in 2017, dmft = 5.03 (2.82, 7.29)]. The highest increase was seen in dt which was more than 17% [in 2017, dt = 4.27 (1.96, 6.57)].

Conclusion: Increasing dental caries among Iranian children over 28 years shows that oral health policies in Iran need critical evaluation. We need cost-effective nationwide interventions (e.g., supervised tooth brushing and improving dietary habits) and training well-experienced intermediate manpower (e.g., dental hygienists) to reduce dental caries.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9789600PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12903-022-02634-zDOI Listing

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