Abstract

Overweight, obesity and early childhood caries (ECC) are preventable conditions affecting infants and young children, with increased prevalence in those formula-fed. Previous research has focused on distinct outcomes for oral health and healthy weight gain. However, the aetiology may be linked through overlapping obesogenic and cariogenic feeding behaviours, such as increased sugar exposure through bottle propping and overfeeding. Best-practice bottle feeding and transition to cup use may concurrently reduce overweight, obesity and ECC. This integrative review aimed to identify interventions supporting best-practice formula feeding or bottle cessation and examine the intervention effects on feeding, oral health and weight outcomes. The reviewers searched nine databases and found 27 studies that met the predetermined inclusion criteria. Eighteen studies focused on populations vulnerable to ECC or unhealthy weight gain. All studies focused on carer education; however, only 10 studies utilised behaviour change techniques or theories addressing antecedents to obesogenic or cariogenic behaviours. The outcomes varied: 16 studies reported mixed outcomes, and eight reported worsened post-intervention outcomes. While some studies reported improvements, these were not maintained long-term. Many study designs were at risk of bias. Effective intervention strategies for preventing ECC and child obesity require the holistic use of interdisciplinary approaches, consumer co-design and the use of behavioural change theory.

Highlights

  • Overweight, obesity and early childhood caries (ECC) are preventable conditions affecting infants and young children

  • What are the impacts of these interventions on formula feeding practice, bottle cessation, oral health and/or child weight outcomes?

  • This review included studies focused on interventions aimed at parents or carers of infants and young children to improve formula, bottle or caries-preventing practices that encourage bottle cessation and cup transition and that measured health or behaviour outcomes relating to feeding practices, parent or carer knowledge, and infant anthropometry

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Summary

Introduction

Overweight, obesity and early childhood caries (ECC) are preventable conditions affecting infants and young children. ECC are dental caries occurring in children aged under 6 years, defined as the presence of one or more primary teeth affected by decay, tooth loss or tooth fillings [1]. The age-standardised prevalence of untreated caries in primary (baby) teeth of children up to 14 years of age ranged from 4.9% (Australia) to. 10.8% (the Philippines) in 2010 [2], with a worldwide prevalence of 7.8% and 126 million.

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