Evaluation of a preventive educational program for malocclusions: 7-year study

Detalhes bibliográficos
Autor(a) principal: SCARPELLI,Beatriz Brandão
Data de Publicação: 2016
Outros Autores: BERGER,Sandrine Bittencourt, PUNHAGUI,Marília Franco, OLIVEIRA,Cássio Alexandre Zeri de, FERELLE,Antonio, OLTRAMARI-NAVARRO,Paula Vanessa Pedron
Tipo de documento: Artigo
Idioma: eng
Título da fonte: Brazilian Oral Research
Texto Completo: http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1806-83242016000100310
Resumo: Abstract This study aimed at evaluating the Protocol for the Prevention of Malocclusions (PPM), established in the preventive educational program developed by the Public Infant Oral Health Program of the State University of Londrina (PIOHP-UEL). Guardians of three-year-olds or older, maintaining nutritive (bottle) and/or non-nutritive (pacifier and finger) sucking habits, attended meetings designed to alert and guide them to eliminating these habits from their children. PPM patient records (2006–2013) were assessed and the data were described and evaluated by the Chi-square test, with a 5% significance level. Results 506 of the 802 guardians/children referred to the PPM joined. As for the children, the most frequently assessed habits were: bottle (56.1%), bottle and pacifier (18.4%), finger (11.9%), bottle and finger (7.1%), pacifier (5.7%), pacifier and finger (0.6%), and bottle/pacifier/finger (0.2%). After parent participation in the meetings, 335 (66.2%) children abandoned their habits. There was a statistical difference between type of oral habit and time to abandonment (p = 0.0001). However, those with only one habit abandoned it more easily (72.6%) than those with two or more associated habits (48.1%) (p = 0.042). Presence or absence of breastfeeding and parents’ level of education had no significant effect on habit abandonment. Conclusion PPM was an important tool for spreading knowledge to guardians, greatly contributing to the abandonment of deleterious oral habits. Bottle sucking warrants special attention - mentioned by 81.8% of parents - either alone or associated with other habits. Thus, educational actions to implement the children’s approach to oral health are fundamental to making behavioral changes and promoting education of healthy habits, thereby keeping malocclusions from developing.
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spelling Evaluation of a preventive educational program for malocclusions: 7-year studyHealth EducationHabitsMalocclusionAbstract This study aimed at evaluating the Protocol for the Prevention of Malocclusions (PPM), established in the preventive educational program developed by the Public Infant Oral Health Program of the State University of Londrina (PIOHP-UEL). Guardians of three-year-olds or older, maintaining nutritive (bottle) and/or non-nutritive (pacifier and finger) sucking habits, attended meetings designed to alert and guide them to eliminating these habits from their children. PPM patient records (2006–2013) were assessed and the data were described and evaluated by the Chi-square test, with a 5% significance level. Results 506 of the 802 guardians/children referred to the PPM joined. As for the children, the most frequently assessed habits were: bottle (56.1%), bottle and pacifier (18.4%), finger (11.9%), bottle and finger (7.1%), pacifier (5.7%), pacifier and finger (0.6%), and bottle/pacifier/finger (0.2%). After parent participation in the meetings, 335 (66.2%) children abandoned their habits. There was a statistical difference between type of oral habit and time to abandonment (p = 0.0001). However, those with only one habit abandoned it more easily (72.6%) than those with two or more associated habits (48.1%) (p = 0.042). Presence or absence of breastfeeding and parents’ level of education had no significant effect on habit abandonment. Conclusion PPM was an important tool for spreading knowledge to guardians, greatly contributing to the abandonment of deleterious oral habits. Bottle sucking warrants special attention - mentioned by 81.8% of parents - either alone or associated with other habits. Thus, educational actions to implement the children’s approach to oral health are fundamental to making behavioral changes and promoting education of healthy habits, thereby keeping malocclusions from developing.Sociedade Brasileira de Pesquisa Odontológica - SBPqO2016-01-01info:eu-repo/semantics/articleinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersiontext/htmlhttp://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1806-83242016000100310Brazilian Oral Research v.30 n.1 2016reponame:Brazilian Oral Researchinstname:Sociedade Brasileira de Pesquisa Odontológica (SBPqO)instacron:SBPQO10.1590/1807-3107bor-2016.vol30.0119info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessSCARPELLI,Beatriz BrandãoBERGER,Sandrine BittencourtPUNHAGUI,Marília FrancoOLIVEIRA,Cássio Alexandre Zeri deFERELLE,AntonioOLTRAMARI-NAVARRO,Paula Vanessa Pedroneng2016-11-23T00:00:00Zoai:scielo:S1806-83242016000100310Revistahttps://www.scielo.br/j/bor/https://old.scielo.br/oai/scielo-oai.phppob@edu.usp.br||bor@sbpqo.org.br1807-31071806-8324opendoar:2016-11-23T00:00Brazilian Oral Research - Sociedade Brasileira de Pesquisa Odontológica (SBPqO)false
dc.title.none.fl_str_mv Evaluation of a preventive educational program for malocclusions: 7-year study
title Evaluation of a preventive educational program for malocclusions: 7-year study
spellingShingle Evaluation of a preventive educational program for malocclusions: 7-year study
SCARPELLI,Beatriz Brandão
Health Education
Habits
Malocclusion
title_short Evaluation of a preventive educational program for malocclusions: 7-year study
title_full Evaluation of a preventive educational program for malocclusions: 7-year study
title_fullStr Evaluation of a preventive educational program for malocclusions: 7-year study
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of a preventive educational program for malocclusions: 7-year study
title_sort Evaluation of a preventive educational program for malocclusions: 7-year study
author SCARPELLI,Beatriz Brandão
author_facet SCARPELLI,Beatriz Brandão
BERGER,Sandrine Bittencourt
PUNHAGUI,Marília Franco
OLIVEIRA,Cássio Alexandre Zeri de
FERELLE,Antonio
OLTRAMARI-NAVARRO,Paula Vanessa Pedron
author_role author
author2 BERGER,Sandrine Bittencourt
PUNHAGUI,Marília Franco
OLIVEIRA,Cássio Alexandre Zeri de
FERELLE,Antonio
OLTRAMARI-NAVARRO,Paula Vanessa Pedron
author2_role author
author
author
author
author
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv SCARPELLI,Beatriz Brandão
BERGER,Sandrine Bittencourt
PUNHAGUI,Marília Franco
OLIVEIRA,Cássio Alexandre Zeri de
FERELLE,Antonio
OLTRAMARI-NAVARRO,Paula Vanessa Pedron
dc.subject.por.fl_str_mv Health Education
Habits
Malocclusion
topic Health Education
Habits
Malocclusion
description Abstract This study aimed at evaluating the Protocol for the Prevention of Malocclusions (PPM), established in the preventive educational program developed by the Public Infant Oral Health Program of the State University of Londrina (PIOHP-UEL). Guardians of three-year-olds or older, maintaining nutritive (bottle) and/or non-nutritive (pacifier and finger) sucking habits, attended meetings designed to alert and guide them to eliminating these habits from their children. PPM patient records (2006–2013) were assessed and the data were described and evaluated by the Chi-square test, with a 5% significance level. Results 506 of the 802 guardians/children referred to the PPM joined. As for the children, the most frequently assessed habits were: bottle (56.1%), bottle and pacifier (18.4%), finger (11.9%), bottle and finger (7.1%), pacifier (5.7%), pacifier and finger (0.6%), and bottle/pacifier/finger (0.2%). After parent participation in the meetings, 335 (66.2%) children abandoned their habits. There was a statistical difference between type of oral habit and time to abandonment (p = 0.0001). However, those with only one habit abandoned it more easily (72.6%) than those with two or more associated habits (48.1%) (p = 0.042). Presence or absence of breastfeeding and parents’ level of education had no significant effect on habit abandonment. Conclusion PPM was an important tool for spreading knowledge to guardians, greatly contributing to the abandonment of deleterious oral habits. Bottle sucking warrants special attention - mentioned by 81.8% of parents - either alone or associated with other habits. Thus, educational actions to implement the children’s approach to oral health are fundamental to making behavioral changes and promoting education of healthy habits, thereby keeping malocclusions from developing.
publishDate 2016
dc.date.none.fl_str_mv 2016-01-01
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dc.relation.none.fl_str_mv 10.1590/1807-3107bor-2016.vol30.0119
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publisher.none.fl_str_mv Sociedade Brasileira de Pesquisa Odontológica - SBPqO
dc.source.none.fl_str_mv Brazilian Oral Research v.30 n.1 2016
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