Volume 37, Issue 6 pp. 495-508

Oral health inequalities between young Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal children living in Ontario, Canada

Herenia P. Lawrence

Herenia P. Lawrence

Community Dentistry Discipline, Department of Biological and Diagnostic Sciences, Faculty of Dentistry, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada

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Darlene Binguis

Darlene Binguis

Sioux Lookout Zone Dental Program, First Nations & Inuit Health Branch, Ontario Region, Health Canada, Sioux Lookout, ON, Canada

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Jan Douglas

Jan Douglas

Sioux Lookout Zone Dental Program, First Nations & Inuit Health Branch, Ontario Region, Health Canada, Sioux Lookout, ON, Canada

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Lynda McKeown

Lynda McKeown

Dental Hygiene Program, Confederation College, Thunder Bay, ON, Canada

Dr S.M. Bloom’s Dental Clinic, Thunder Bay, ON, Canada

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Bonita Switzer

Bonita Switzer

Sioux Lookout Zone Dental Program, First Nations & Inuit Health Branch, Ontario Region, Health Canada, Sioux Lookout, ON, Canada

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Rafael Figueiredo

Rafael Figueiredo

Community Dentistry Discipline, Department of Biological and Diagnostic Sciences, Faculty of Dentistry, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada

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Margaret Reade

Margaret Reade

Sioux Lookout Zone Dental Program, First Nations & Inuit Health Branch, Ontario Region, Health Canada, Sioux Lookout, ON, Canada

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First published: 12 November 2009
Citations: 24
Dr Herenia P. Lawrence, Associate Professor, Discipline of Community Dentistry, Department of Biological and Diagnostic Sciences, Faculty of Dentistry, University of Toronto, 124 Edward Street, Room 515D, Toronto, ON, Canada M5G 1G6
Tel.: (416) 979 4908 extn 1 4492
Fax: (416) 979 4936
e-mail: [email protected]

Abstract

Abstract – Objectives: To investigate (i) oral health inequalities between off-reserve Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal children entering junior kindergarten (JK) in the Thunder Bay District, Northwest Ontario, Canada, (ii) oral health inequalities between kindergarten-aged (4 years old) Aboriginal children living on reserves in the Sioux Lookout Zone (SLZ), Northwest Ontario and those living off-reserve in the Thunder Bay District and (iii) early childhood caries (ECC) trends among SLZ children between 2001 and 2005.

Methods: Cross-sectional oral health data (dmft/s Indices) for 416 (2003/2004), 687 (2004/2005) and 544 (2005/2006) 3- to 5-year olds attending JK in the Thunder Bay District were collected by calibrated dental hygienists with the District’s Health Unit. Secondary analysis of oral health status data from two studies conducted in the SLZ between 2001 and 2005 provided the dmft of random samples of children younger than 6 years of age living in 16–20 First Nations communities.

Results: When compared with non-Aboriginal children aged 3–5 years attending the same schools in the Thunder Bay District between 2003 and 2006, off-reserve Aboriginal children had 1.9 to 2.3 times the risk of having ECC (dmft > 0), 2.9 to 3.5 times the risk of a dmft > 3 and 1.8 to 2.5 times the risk of untreated decayed teeth after adjusting the prevalence ratios for child’s age and sex, school’s risk level and clustered-correlated data. The mean dmft of on-reserve Aboriginal 4-year olds in 2005 was 11.2 and 5.9 for their off-reserve Aboriginal counterparts. In 2001, the mean dmft scores (95% confidence interval) of 2-, 3- and 4-year-old Aboriginal children in the SLZ were: 9.1 (8.3–9.9), 12.4 (11.8–13.1), 13.1 (12.1–14.2). In 2005, similarly aged SLZ children had a mean dmft of: 6.2 (5.2–7.1), 8.9 (8.2–9.6), 11.2 (10.5–11.9), representing significant reductions in caries severity (32%, 28% and 14.5%, respectively).

Conclusions: Significant disparities in caries experience exist between off-reserve Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal children living in the same locales and between Aboriginal children living on- and off-reserve in northwestern Ontario. The study showed decreased trends in the severity of ECC for children in the SLZ occurring over the 5-year period. Despite this progress, the oral health of young Aboriginal children in Ontario continues to lag far behind that of non-Aboriginal children, demanding further programs and policies to tackle the social determinants of oral health and resolve these inequalities.

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