Abstract

BackgroundOral health literacy (OHL) has been recognized as a component of oral health disparities; however, the precise relationship between literacy and oral health outcomes has not been established. To explore the role of parents' OHL for their own subjective oral health, related behavior, and for the proxy assessment of their child's oral health, oral health-related behavior.MethodsSurvey data were collected from 406 parents of 4- to 7-year-old children in Beijing, China. The background characteristics, oral health assessment, oral health-related behavior, knowledge and attitudes, and diet-related questions of parents and their children were surveyed by a questionnaire. OHL was assessed with the Hong Kong Rapid Estimate of Adult Literacy in Dentistry (HKREAL-30) Scale and a revised version that asked the respondents to indicate if they understood the words (HKREALD-30-Understand).ResultsThe HKREALD-30 responses correlated with the HKREALD-30-Understand responses. The higher the parents' HKREALD-30-Understand scores, the better they described the health of their own teeth and gums, the greater their child's diet was influenced by the protein, sugar and calories of the food, and the more positive their oral health-related attitudes were. The higher the parent's HKREALD-30 scores, the healthier they described their child's teeth and gums.ConclusionsBoth the HKREALD-30 and HKREALD-30-Understand Scores correlate with parents' self and proxy oral health-related responses. Chinese parents could understand that the word would add predictive value to the prediction of how parents' oral health literacy affects their own oral health care, children's oral health and other related aspects.

Highlights

  • IntroductionPrevious evidence has proven the prevalence of low literacy in health care settings and its adverse influence on health outcomes (1, 2)

  • Data were collected from five hundred and one parent of children who participated in the regular dental examination, which was held in the daycare by dentists from Peking University School and Hospital of Stomatology in 2018

  • When the parents responded concerning the children’s background characteristics, 52% were male, and the children ranged in age from 4 to 7 years

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Summary

Introduction

Previous evidence has proven the prevalence of low literacy in health care settings and its adverse influence on health outcomes (1, 2). The precise relationship between literacy and oral health outcomes has not been established (8–11), OHL has been increasingly recognized as a component of oral health disparities. Related studies revealed that the better parents’ oral health literacy was, the better their own oral health (12, 13), and the better their children’s oral health (10, 14). Studies have demonstrated an association between decreased parental OHL and worse oral health behaviors, which had an adverse impact on children’s oral health-related quality of life (19). Only a few studies have explored oral health-related behaviors. Oral health literacy (OHL) has been recognized as a component of oral health disparities; the precise relationship between literacy and oral health outcomes has not been established. To explore the role of parents’ OHL for their own subjective oral health, related behavior, and for the proxy assessment of their child’s oral health, oral health-related behavior

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