 |
|
 |
 |
 |
School-based Sealant Program Reduces Disparities in Sealant Use
A model program promoted by the Ohio Department of
Health has shown that elementary school-age children who attend schools
with school-based dental sealant programs are two to three times more
likely to have dental sealants applied to their teeth than those attending
schools that don’t have such programs. An article in today’s MMWR reports the results of a study conducted during the 1998-99 school year
that compared sealant prevalence in 11,191 third-grade students attending
335 schools in 87 of Ohio’s 88 counties.
Dental sealants are
plastic coatings applied to the chewing surfaces of teeth that can prevent
dental decay. When properly placed, dental sealants are almost 100%
effective in preventing decay on the chewing surfaces of first and second
permanent molar teeth. Although Healthy People 2010 has established a
national goal of assuring that 50% of all 8-year-olds having sealants,
only 23% of all 8-year-olds, 11% of African American children, 10% of
Mexican American children, and 3% of poor 8-year-old children have
received dental sealants.
The study found that in
the schools with sealant programs, both African American and White
students, as well as students of all income levels, had achieved or
exceeded the national Healthy People 2010 goal. In schools with sealant
programs, 57.2% of students had a sealant, compared with 28.2% of students
attending schools without sealant programs. Seventy percent of the
students who had sealants and were in schools with programs had received
them at school.
"Providing sealant
programs in all high-risk schools could reduce or eliminate gaps in who
receives these preventive tools," states William R. Maas, DDS, MPH,
director of CDC’s Division of Oral Health. "State and local health
departments should consider this approach to effectively reach children at
high risk of dental decay."
Dental decay is the
most prevalent chronic infectious disease of childhood; 80% of all
children have had dental decay by the time they are 18 years old.
Related
Links
Historical Document
Page last reviewed: June 1, 2007
Content source:
Division of Oral Health,
National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and
Health Promotion |
 |