Abstract

In lower middle-income economies (LMIE), the nutrition transition from traditional diets to sugary foods and beverages has contributed to widespread early childhood dental caries. This qualitative study explores perceived risk and protective factors, and overall experiences of early childhood nutrition and oral health in indigenous Ecuadorian families participating in a community-based oral health and nutrition intervention. Dental exams of 698 children age 6 months through 6 years determined each child’s caries burden. A convenience sample of 18 “outlier” families was identified: low-caries children with ≤2 carious teeth vs. high-caries children with ≥10 carious teeth. Semi-structured in-depth interviews with parents/caregivers explored the child’s diet, dental habits, and family factors related to nutrition and oral health. Interviews were transcribed and thematically analyzed using grounded theory. In the high-caries families, proximity to highway and stores, consumption of processed-food, and low parental monitoring of child behavior were identified as risk factors for ECC (early childhood caries). In the low-caries families, protective factors included harvesting and consuming food from the family farm, remote geography, and greater parental monitoring of child behavior. The study results suggest that maintaining traditional family farms and authoritative parenting to avoid processed foods/drinks and ensure tooth brushing could improve early childhood nutrition and oral health.

Highlights

  • IntroductionLower middle income economies (LMIE) have experienced a nutrition transition from traditional diets to sugary, highly processed foods and beverages, resulting in a dramatically increased prevalence of diet-related chronic diseases, including tooth decay, obesity, type

  • Over recent decades, lower middle income economies (LMIE) have experienced a nutrition transition from traditional diets to sugary, highly processed foods and beverages, resulting in a dramatically increased prevalence of diet-related chronic diseases, including tooth decay, obesity, type2 diabetes, and cardiovascular disease [1,2]

  • The goal of this study was to gain a better understanding of the complex child, family and community factors underlying the broad disparity in early childhood tooth decay—at both extremes of caries prevalence—in this sample of indigenous children

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Summary

Introduction

Lower middle income economies (LMIE) have experienced a nutrition transition from traditional diets to sugary, highly processed foods and beverages, resulting in a dramatically increased prevalence of diet-related chronic diseases, including tooth decay, obesity, type. 2 diabetes, and cardiovascular disease [1,2]. Caries, is the most prevalent chronic disease worldwide, affecting 60–90% of children [2]. The consequences include chronic mouth pain, malnutrition, poor self-image, and diminished educational and economic potential [2,3,4]. Childhood caries are often quantified by the number of decayed, missing, or filled deciduous teeth (DMFT) in children under six years of age [4,8]. Public Health 2017, 14, 907; doi:10.3390/ijerph14080907 www.mdpi.com/journal/ijerph

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