The Longitudinal Reciprocal Relationships of Tooth Brushing Behaviors Between Underserved Children and Their Caregivers.
Ann Behav Med
; 58(5): 353-362, 2024 Apr 11.
Article
em En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-38489828
ABSTRACT
BACKGROUND:
Tooth brushing is effective in preventing early childhood caries. However, it is unclear how children's and caregiver's tooth brushing are reciprocally related.PURPOSE:
The current study investigated whether the longitudinal relationships between children and caregiver tooth brushing are moderated by a caregiver-targeted child oral health intervention and caregiver depression.METHODS:
Secondary analysis of a randomized clinical trial that tested whether caregiver-targeted oral health text messages (OHT) outperformed child wellness text messages (CWT) on pediatric dental caries and oral health behaviors (n = 754, mean child age = 2.9 years, 56.2% Black, 68.3% <poverty level). Tooth brushing behaviors were self-reported by caregivers using a timeline follow-back method at baseline and 4, 12, and 24 months later. Caregiver depressive symptoms were self-reported at baseline. A multigroup random intercept cross-lagged panel model examined relationships between caregiver and child tooth brushing for four post hoc groupings of condition OHT versus CWT, and caregiver depressive symptoms high versus low.RESULTS:
Within-participants analyses revealed that caregiver tooth brushing at Months 4 and 12 positively predicted their child's tooth brushing at Months 12 and 24 for caregivers in the OHT condition with low depressive symptoms (i.e., moderation by depressive symptoms and condition). Similarly, children's tooth brushing at Month 4 positively predicted caregiver tooth brushing at Month 12 for caregivers in the OHT condition with low depressive symptoms. There were no significant associations among participants in the CWT condition, regardless of depressive symptoms.CONCLUSIONS:
Child and caregiver tooth brushing have reciprocal influences, but only for those in the OHT condition with low depressive symptoms.
Tooth brushing is effective in preventing dental cavities in children, but we do not know if or how children and caregiver brushing frequencies are related. This is important because interventions targeting children's oral health may also have the potential to benefit their caregiver's behaviors. Our study examined whether caregiver brushing of their own teeth and caregiver brushing of their young child's teeth positively influenced each other over time. We also explored whether this relationship was less likely if caregivers experienced depressive symptoms and more likely if caregivers participated in a text message program focused on improving their child's oral health. Results showed that caregiver and child tooth brushing behaviors positively influenced each other over time, but this relationship was observed only in caregivers who received the child oral health program (as opposed to the control group) and who reported low depressive symptoms (in contrast to caregivers with high depression symptoms). Our findings suggest that while caregivers and children positively influence each other's tooth-brushing behaviors over time, additional support is essential for caregivers experiencing depression to fully realize these reciprocal benefits.
Palavras-chave
Texto completo:
1
Coleções:
01-internacional
Base de dados:
MEDLINE
Assunto principal:
Escovação Dentária
/
Cárie Dentária
Limite:
Child
/
Child, preschool
/
Humans
Idioma:
En
Revista:
Ann Behav Med
Ano de publicação:
2024
Tipo de documento:
Article