Community Dental Health
- Cover Date:
- March 2008
- Print ISSN:
- 0265 539X
- Vol:
- 25
- Issue:
- 1
Exposure to water fluoridation and caries increment
Objective The objective of this cohort study was to examine the association between exposure to water fluoridation and the increment of dental caries in two Australian states: Queensland (Qld) – 5 per cent fluoridation coverage; and South Australia (SA) - 70 per cent fluoridation coverage. Method Stratified random samples were drawn from fluoridated Adelaide and the largely non-fluoridated rest-of-state in SA, and fluoridated Townsville and non-fluoridated Brisbane in Qld. Participants Children were enrolled between 1991 and 1992 (SA: 5-15 yrs old, n=9,980; Qld: 5-12 yrs old, n=10,695). Follow-up caries status data for 3 years (± ½ year) were available on 8,183 children in SA and 6,711 children in Qld. Main outcome measures Baseline data on lifetime exposure to fluoridated water, use of other fluorides and socio-economic status (SES) were collected by questionnaire, and tooth surface caries status by dental examinations in school dental service clinics. Results Higher per cent lifetime exposure to fluoridated water (6 categories: 0;1–24;25–49;50–74;75–99;100 per cent) was a significant predictor (ANOVA, p<0.01) of lower annualised Net Caries Increment (NCI) for the deciduous dentition in SA and Qld, but only for Qld in the permanent dentition. These associations persisted in multiple linear regression analyses controlling for age, gender, exposure to other fluorides and SES (p<0.05). Conclusions Water fluoridation was effective in reducing caries increment, even in the presence of a dilution effect from other fluorides. The effect of fluoridated water consumption was strongest in the deciduous dentition and where diffusion of food and beverages from fluoridated to non-fluoridated areas was less likely.
Keywords: Children, dental caries; fluoridation
- Article Price
- £15.00
- Institution Article Price
- £
- Page Start
- 12
- Page End
- 22
- Authors
- A. J. Spencer, J.M. Armfield, G.D. Slade
Articles from this issue
- Title
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- Pg. End
- Editorial - Oral health promotion by the oral health products industry: unrecognised and unappreciated?
- 2
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- Selecting a coherent set of indicators for monitoring and evaluating oral health in Europe: criteria, methods and results from the EGOHID I project.
- 4
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- A comparison of two methods for the evaluation of the daily urinary fluoride excretion in Romanian pre-school children
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- A randomised control trial of oral health education provided by a health visitor to parents of pre-school children
- 28
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- The influence of social indices on oral health and oral health behaviour in a group of Flemish socially deprived adolescents.
- 33
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- Development of a shortened Japanese version of the Oral Health Impact Profile (OHIP) for young and middle-aged adults
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- The prevalence of enamel opacities in permanent teeth of 11-12 year-old school children in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
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