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Provision of Oral Health Care to Children under Seven Covered by Bolsa Família Program. Is This a Reality?

Over the last decade, there has been a great improvement in the oral health of Brazilians. However, such a trend was not observed among five-year-old children. Dental caries are determined by the interplay between biological and behavioral factors that are shaped by broader socioeconomic determinant...

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Autores principales: Petrola, Krishna Andréia Feitosa, Bezerra, Ítalo Barroso, de Menezes, Érico Alexandro Vasconcelos, Calvasina, Paola, Saintrain, Maria Vieira de Lima, Pimentel G. F. Vieira-Meyer, Anya
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4990266/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27537330
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0161244
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author Petrola, Krishna Andréia Feitosa
Bezerra, Ítalo Barroso
de Menezes, Érico Alexandro Vasconcelos
Calvasina, Paola
Saintrain, Maria Vieira de Lima
Pimentel G. F. Vieira-Meyer, Anya
author_facet Petrola, Krishna Andréia Feitosa
Bezerra, Ítalo Barroso
de Menezes, Érico Alexandro Vasconcelos
Calvasina, Paola
Saintrain, Maria Vieira de Lima
Pimentel G. F. Vieira-Meyer, Anya
author_sort Petrola, Krishna Andréia Feitosa
collection PubMed
description Over the last decade, there has been a great improvement in the oral health of Brazilians. However, such a trend was not observed among five-year-old children. Dental caries are determined by the interplay between biological and behavioral factors that are shaped by broader socioeconomic determinants. It is well established that dental disease is concentrated in socially disadvantaged populations. To reduce social and health inequalities, the Brazilian government created Family Health Program (ESF), and the Bolsa Família Program, the Brazilian conditional cash transfer program (Bolsa Família Program). The aim of this study was to examine the oral health care and promotion provided by the Family Health Teams to children and caregivers covered by the Bolsa Família Program. Data was collected through interviews with three groups of participants: 1) dentists working for the Family Health Program; 2) Family Health Program professionals supervising the Bolsa Família Program health conditionalities (Bolsa Família Program supervisors); and 3) parents/caregivers of children covered by the Bolsa Família Program. A pretested questionnaire included sociodemographic, Bolsa Família Program, oral health promotion, dental prevention and dental treatment questions. The results showed that most dentists performed no systematic efforts to promote oral health care to children covered by the Bolsa Família Program (93.3%; n = 69) or to their parents/caregivers (74.3%; n = 55). Many dentists (33.8%) did not provide oral health care to children covered by the Bolsa Família Program because they felt it was beyond their responsibilities. Nearly all Bolsa Família Program supervisors (97.3%; n = 72) supported the inclusion of oral health care in the health conditionality of the Bolsa Família Program, but 82.4% (n = 61) stated they did not promote oral health activities to children covered by the Bolsa Família Program. Children in the routine care setting were more often referred to dentists than children covered by the Bolsa Familia Program (p≤0.001). Parents/caregivers (99.2%; n = 381) agreed that oral health care is important and 99.5% (n = 382) would like their children to be seen regularly. Conclusions: No collaboration was observed between the Bolsa Família Program and the Family Health Program with regard to the provision of oral health care. Making oral health care a Bolsa Família Program conditionality may reduce oral health care inequalities for extreme poor children under seven in Brazil.
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spelling pubmed-49902662016-08-29 Provision of Oral Health Care to Children under Seven Covered by Bolsa Família Program. Is This a Reality? Petrola, Krishna Andréia Feitosa Bezerra, Ítalo Barroso de Menezes, Érico Alexandro Vasconcelos Calvasina, Paola Saintrain, Maria Vieira de Lima Pimentel G. F. Vieira-Meyer, Anya PLoS One Research Article Over the last decade, there has been a great improvement in the oral health of Brazilians. However, such a trend was not observed among five-year-old children. Dental caries are determined by the interplay between biological and behavioral factors that are shaped by broader socioeconomic determinants. It is well established that dental disease is concentrated in socially disadvantaged populations. To reduce social and health inequalities, the Brazilian government created Family Health Program (ESF), and the Bolsa Família Program, the Brazilian conditional cash transfer program (Bolsa Família Program). The aim of this study was to examine the oral health care and promotion provided by the Family Health Teams to children and caregivers covered by the Bolsa Família Program. Data was collected through interviews with three groups of participants: 1) dentists working for the Family Health Program; 2) Family Health Program professionals supervising the Bolsa Família Program health conditionalities (Bolsa Família Program supervisors); and 3) parents/caregivers of children covered by the Bolsa Família Program. A pretested questionnaire included sociodemographic, Bolsa Família Program, oral health promotion, dental prevention and dental treatment questions. The results showed that most dentists performed no systematic efforts to promote oral health care to children covered by the Bolsa Família Program (93.3%; n = 69) or to their parents/caregivers (74.3%; n = 55). Many dentists (33.8%) did not provide oral health care to children covered by the Bolsa Família Program because they felt it was beyond their responsibilities. Nearly all Bolsa Família Program supervisors (97.3%; n = 72) supported the inclusion of oral health care in the health conditionality of the Bolsa Família Program, but 82.4% (n = 61) stated they did not promote oral health activities to children covered by the Bolsa Família Program. Children in the routine care setting were more often referred to dentists than children covered by the Bolsa Familia Program (p≤0.001). Parents/caregivers (99.2%; n = 381) agreed that oral health care is important and 99.5% (n = 382) would like their children to be seen regularly. Conclusions: No collaboration was observed between the Bolsa Família Program and the Family Health Program with regard to the provision of oral health care. Making oral health care a Bolsa Família Program conditionality may reduce oral health care inequalities for extreme poor children under seven in Brazil. Public Library of Science 2016-08-18 /pmc/articles/PMC4990266/ /pubmed/27537330 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0161244 Text en © 2016 Petrola et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Petrola, Krishna Andréia Feitosa
Bezerra, Ítalo Barroso
de Menezes, Érico Alexandro Vasconcelos
Calvasina, Paola
Saintrain, Maria Vieira de Lima
Pimentel G. F. Vieira-Meyer, Anya
Provision of Oral Health Care to Children under Seven Covered by Bolsa Família Program. Is This a Reality?
title Provision of Oral Health Care to Children under Seven Covered by Bolsa Família Program. Is This a Reality?
title_full Provision of Oral Health Care to Children under Seven Covered by Bolsa Família Program. Is This a Reality?
title_fullStr Provision of Oral Health Care to Children under Seven Covered by Bolsa Família Program. Is This a Reality?
title_full_unstemmed Provision of Oral Health Care to Children under Seven Covered by Bolsa Família Program. Is This a Reality?
title_short Provision of Oral Health Care to Children under Seven Covered by Bolsa Família Program. Is This a Reality?
title_sort provision of oral health care to children under seven covered by bolsa família program. is this a reality?
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4990266/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27537330
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0161244
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