Litcius/Paper detail

Children’s oral health‐related behaviours and early childhood caries: A latent class analysis

Miguel Simancas‐Pallares, Jeannie Ginnis, William F. Vann, Andréa G. Ferreira Zandoná, Poojan Shrestha, John S. Preisser, Kimon Divaris

2021Community Dentistry And Oral Epidemiology22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: In this cross-sectional study in a large community-based sample of preschool-age children, we sought to identify distinct clusters of modifiable early childhood oral health-related behaviours (OHBs) and quantify their association with clinical and parent-reported measures of early childhood oral health. METHODS: We relied upon a questionnaire (n = 8033; 11% in Spanish) and clinical oral health data (n = 6404; early childhood caries [ECC] prevalence = 54%] collected in the context of an epidemiologic study of early childhood oral health among 3- to 5-year-old children in North Carolina. Latent class analysis was used to identify clusters of modifiable OHBs based on parents' responses to 6 questionnaire items pertaining to their children's oral hygiene, diet and dental home. The optimal number of clusters was determined based on measures of model fit and interpretability. We examined associations of OHB clusters with clinical and parent-reported child oral health status (ie, ECC prevalence, severity and proportion with untreated disease) using bivariate association tests and multivariable regression modelling with marginal effects estimation accounting for clustered data. We used Mplus v.8.6 (Muthén & Muthén, Los Angeles, CA, USA) and Stata v.16.1 (StataCorp, College Station, TX, USA) for data analyses. RESULTS: We identified 2 OHB clusters, a favourable (74%) and an unfavourable (26%) one. Children in the favourable OHB cluster had better oral hygiene practices (ie, tooth brushing frequency and fluoridated toothpaste use), lower consumption frequency of sugar-containing snacks and beverages, less frequent reports of night-time bottle-feeding history and a higher likelihood of a dental home. Children in the unfavourable cluster had significantly higher ECC prevalence (57% vs 53%), caries burden (mean dmfs = 9.3 vs 7.6), untreated disease (43% vs 33%) and worse parent-reported oral health status than the favourable cluster. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings demonstrate the importance and utility of clustering common, modifiable ECC risk factors in population studies - health promotion efforts may centre on groups of people rather than individual behavioural risk factors.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineEarly childhood cariesOral hygieneContext (archaeology)Latent class modelEnvironmental healthOral healthEarly childhoodTooth brushingCross-sectional studyCluster samplingDemographyFamily medicinePopulationDentistryToothbrushEngineeringBiologySociologyStatisticsBrushDevelopmental psychologyElectrical engineeringPaleontologyPsychologyMathematicsPathologyDental Health and Care UtilizationOral microbiology and periodontitis researchFood Security and Health in Diverse Populations
Children’s oral health‐related behaviours and early childhood caries: A latent class analysis | Litcius