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Monetary incentives for improving smartphone-measured oral hygiene behaviors in young children: A randomized pilot trial

AIMS: To assess feasibility, acceptability, and early efficacy of monetary incentive-based interventions on fostering oral hygiene in young children measured with a Bluetooth-enabled toothbrush and smartphone application. DESIGN: A stratified, parallel-group, three-arm individually randomized contro...

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Autores principales: White, Justin S., Ramos-Gomez, Francisco, Liu, Jenny X., Jue, Bonnie, Finlayson, Tracy L., Garza, Jeremiah R., Crawford, Alexandra H., Helman, Sarit, Santo, William, Cheng, Jing, Kahn, James G., Gansky, Stuart A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7392266/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32730310
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0236692
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author White, Justin S.
Ramos-Gomez, Francisco
Liu, Jenny X.
Jue, Bonnie
Finlayson, Tracy L.
Garza, Jeremiah R.
Crawford, Alexandra H.
Helman, Sarit
Santo, William
Cheng, Jing
Kahn, James G.
Gansky, Stuart A.
author_facet White, Justin S.
Ramos-Gomez, Francisco
Liu, Jenny X.
Jue, Bonnie
Finlayson, Tracy L.
Garza, Jeremiah R.
Crawford, Alexandra H.
Helman, Sarit
Santo, William
Cheng, Jing
Kahn, James G.
Gansky, Stuart A.
author_sort White, Justin S.
collection PubMed
description AIMS: To assess feasibility, acceptability, and early efficacy of monetary incentive-based interventions on fostering oral hygiene in young children measured with a Bluetooth-enabled toothbrush and smartphone application. DESIGN: A stratified, parallel-group, three-arm individually randomized controlled pilot trial. SETTING: Two Los Angeles area Early Head Start (EHS) sites. PARTICIPANTS: 36 parent-child dyads enrolled in an EHS home visit program for 0–3 year olds. INTERVENTIONS: Eligible dyads, within strata and permuted blocks, were randomized in equal allocation to one of three groups: waitlist (delayed monetary incentive) control group, fixed monetary incentive package, or lottery monetary incentive package. The intervention lasted 8 weeks. OUTCOMES: Primary outcomes were a) toothbrushing performance: mean number of Bluetooth-recorded half-day episodes per week when the child’s teeth were brushed, and b) dental visit by the 2-month follow-up among children with no prior dental visit. The a priori milestone of 20% more frequent toothbrushing identified the intervention for a subsequent trial. Feasibility and acceptability measures were also assessed, including frequency of parents syncing the Bluetooth-enabled toothbrush to the smartphone application and plaque measurement from digital photographs. FINDINGS: Digital monitoring of toothbrushing was feasible. Mean number of weekly toothbrushing episodes over 8 weeks was 3.9 in the control group, 4.1 in the fixed incentive group, and 6.0 in the lottery incentive group. The lottery group had 53% more frequent toothbrushing than the control group and 47% more frequent toothbrushing than the fixed group. Exploratory analyses showed effects concentrated among children ≤24 months. Follow-up dental visit attendance was similar across groups. iPhone 7 more reliably captured evaluable images than Photomed Cannon G16. CONCLUSIONS: Trial protocol and outcome measures were deemed feasible and acceptable. Results informed the study protocol for a fully powered trial of lottery incentives versus a delayed control using the smart toothbrush and remote digital incentive program administration. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov identifier NCT03862443.
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spelling pubmed-73922662020-08-05 Monetary incentives for improving smartphone-measured oral hygiene behaviors in young children: A randomized pilot trial White, Justin S. Ramos-Gomez, Francisco Liu, Jenny X. Jue, Bonnie Finlayson, Tracy L. Garza, Jeremiah R. Crawford, Alexandra H. Helman, Sarit Santo, William Cheng, Jing Kahn, James G. Gansky, Stuart A. PLoS One Research Article AIMS: To assess feasibility, acceptability, and early efficacy of monetary incentive-based interventions on fostering oral hygiene in young children measured with a Bluetooth-enabled toothbrush and smartphone application. DESIGN: A stratified, parallel-group, three-arm individually randomized controlled pilot trial. SETTING: Two Los Angeles area Early Head Start (EHS) sites. PARTICIPANTS: 36 parent-child dyads enrolled in an EHS home visit program for 0–3 year olds. INTERVENTIONS: Eligible dyads, within strata and permuted blocks, were randomized in equal allocation to one of three groups: waitlist (delayed monetary incentive) control group, fixed monetary incentive package, or lottery monetary incentive package. The intervention lasted 8 weeks. OUTCOMES: Primary outcomes were a) toothbrushing performance: mean number of Bluetooth-recorded half-day episodes per week when the child’s teeth were brushed, and b) dental visit by the 2-month follow-up among children with no prior dental visit. The a priori milestone of 20% more frequent toothbrushing identified the intervention for a subsequent trial. Feasibility and acceptability measures were also assessed, including frequency of parents syncing the Bluetooth-enabled toothbrush to the smartphone application and plaque measurement from digital photographs. FINDINGS: Digital monitoring of toothbrushing was feasible. Mean number of weekly toothbrushing episodes over 8 weeks was 3.9 in the control group, 4.1 in the fixed incentive group, and 6.0 in the lottery incentive group. The lottery group had 53% more frequent toothbrushing than the control group and 47% more frequent toothbrushing than the fixed group. Exploratory analyses showed effects concentrated among children ≤24 months. Follow-up dental visit attendance was similar across groups. iPhone 7 more reliably captured evaluable images than Photomed Cannon G16. CONCLUSIONS: Trial protocol and outcome measures were deemed feasible and acceptable. Results informed the study protocol for a fully powered trial of lottery incentives versus a delayed control using the smart toothbrush and remote digital incentive program administration. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov identifier NCT03862443. Public Library of Science 2020-07-30 /pmc/articles/PMC7392266/ /pubmed/32730310 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0236692 Text en © 2020 White 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
White, Justin S.
Ramos-Gomez, Francisco
Liu, Jenny X.
Jue, Bonnie
Finlayson, Tracy L.
Garza, Jeremiah R.
Crawford, Alexandra H.
Helman, Sarit
Santo, William
Cheng, Jing
Kahn, James G.
Gansky, Stuart A.
Monetary incentives for improving smartphone-measured oral hygiene behaviors in young children: A randomized pilot trial
title Monetary incentives for improving smartphone-measured oral hygiene behaviors in young children: A randomized pilot trial
title_full Monetary incentives for improving smartphone-measured oral hygiene behaviors in young children: A randomized pilot trial
title_fullStr Monetary incentives for improving smartphone-measured oral hygiene behaviors in young children: A randomized pilot trial
title_full_unstemmed Monetary incentives for improving smartphone-measured oral hygiene behaviors in young children: A randomized pilot trial
title_short Monetary incentives for improving smartphone-measured oral hygiene behaviors in young children: A randomized pilot trial
title_sort monetary incentives for improving smartphone-measured oral hygiene behaviors in young children: a randomized pilot trial
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7392266/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32730310
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0236692
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