By Bob
Ratliff MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Children in Tunica, Greenville and other Delta
locations are helping researchers learn more about one of
the nation's biggest childhood-health problems -- a severe
form of decay in primary, or baby, teeth known as early
childhood caries. Students
at 16 Delta childcare and Early Headstart Centers, along
with their parents and teachers, are participating in a
two-year oral healthcare initiative funded by a grant from
the federal Agency for Healthcare Research and
Quality. "Children
in the rural South face some specific health challenges,
including those related to oral health care," said Linda H.
Southward, a social scientist with the Mississippi
Agricultural and Forestry Experiment Station and coordinator
of the Social Science Research Center Family and Children
Research Unit. "A recent report by the U.S. Surgeon General
cited oral disease, especially early childhood caries, as
one of the nation's greatest preventable childhood-health
problems." In the
children's oral healthcare initiative, Southward and
Mississippi State University research psychologist Elisabeth
Wells-Parker are leading a group of health researchers that
includes scientists from the Center for Child Health
Research of the American Academy of Pediatrics,
the Department of Diagnostic Sciences at the University of
Mississippi Medical Center's School of Dentistry, Columbia
University School of Dentistry and Oral Surgery, and the
Children's Dental Health Project in Washington,
D.C. "The
grant makes possible a research network of childcare centers
to conduct oral health assessments of preschool children in
the Delta," Southward said. "Some of the country's leading
pediatric dentists are consultants for the
project." The
social scientists and medical professionals have developed a
questionnaire for parents and day-care workers to determine
behaviors and practices that play a role in early childhood
caries. "A lot
of research is available for adults and older children, but
there is very little information for preschool children,"
said Dr. Stephen Silberman, professor and head of the
Department of Diagnostic Services at the University Medical
Center's School of Dentistry in Jackson. Silberman
and Dr. Neva Penton-Eklund are conducting examinations of
children at the participating Delta day-care centers.
Penton-Eklund is an assistant professor of pediatric
dentistry at the UM School of Dentistry. The
health-history questionnaire for parents and day-care
workers, however, is the first step in making a caries risk
assessment, Silberman added. "We
want to find out the parent's oral health history," he said.
"We're also asking the parents and child-care center
personnel about what the children eat and drink." Information
on eating and drinking habits is important because prolonged
and frequent exposure to sugary liquids such as formula,
milk, juice or sodas is a leading cause of early childhood
caries. The
results of the research being conducted by the MSU and UM
scientists will help parents and other care providers avoid
practices that cause caries, according to Columbus dentist
Dr. David Curtis, one of the consultants for the oral health
care initiative. "Dental
caries is the most prevalent chronic disease of children,
five times more common than asthma," he said. "Oral disease
results in more missed school days than any other single
chronic disease." Curtis,
the current president of the American Academy of Pediatric
Dentistry, added that the day-care center research is
important in educating individuals responsible for
children's oral health care. "The
importance of the research really boils down to intervention
and prevention," he said. "At the AAPD, we believe proper
education and training of primary care givers, including
parents, day-care workers and teachers, can result in a
significant improvement in oral disease in children, but we
need more data to support that supposition." The
research in the Delta will provide important information for
education and training programs, according to
Southward. "Finding
ways to prevent health problems before they begin is a
primary goal," she said. "Mississippi has some of the worst
health outcomes in the nation, and what we learn here can
have far-reaching implications for the state and the
nation." -30- Released:
April 28, 2003
Family,
Youth & Consumer News
![]()
Delta research
focuses on brighter
smiles for kids
Contact: Dr. Linda Southward, (662) 325-7127
Visit: DAFVM
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