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Follow‐Up Preventive Dental Visits for Medicaid‐Enrolled Children in the Medical Office
Author(s) -
Quiñonez Rocio Beatriz,
Pahel Bhavna T.,
Rozier R. Gary,
Stearns Sally C.
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
journal of public health dentistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.64
H-Index - 63
eISSN - 1752-7325
pISSN - 0022-4006
DOI - 10.1111/j.1752-7325.2007.00055.x
Subject(s) - medicine , medicaid , fluoride varnish , family medicine , oral health , oral and maxillofacial pathology , pediatrics , health care , dentistry , chemistry , organic chemistry , economics , varnish , economic growth , coating
Objective: To describe the frequency and determinants of follow‐up preventive oral health visits at medical offices among children screened for dental disease, receiving fluoride varnish and counseling. Methods: Parents of Medicaid children enrolled in a clinical trial completed a baseline questionnaire before their child's medical visit. The providers completed patient dental encounter forms at each visit, documenting dental services, caries risk, and dental disease. Questionnaires, encounter forms, and Medicaid claims were linked to create a database with information on visits, child and caregiver characteristics, and oral health practices. Descriptive and multivariate analyses assessed associations of variables with likelihood of follow‐up visits. Results: A total of 744 children with mean age of 15 months at enrollment had 1,415 oral health visits. Children averaged 0.9 follow‐up oral health visits and 1.3 follow‐up well‐child visits. Fewer children had follow‐up oral health visits (55 percent) than well‐child visits (70 percent), but children with a baseline preventive dental visit at a younger age had more visits with shorter intervals. Caregivers reporting greater numbers of children and putting the child to bed with the bottle had more subsequent visits. Older age of child, male child, and caregiver education ≤12 years were associated with fewer follow‐up visits. Conclusions: Children with preventive dental services in medical offices have similar numbers of oral health and well‐child visits, with both below recommended numbers. Strategies to increase these services may need to be tied to those aimed at increasing compliance with well‐child visits, taking advantage of nonwell‐child visits, and implementing Medicaid policies that allow for optimal timing of visits.