Title: Shades of Decay
1Shades of Decay
- The Meanings of Tooth Discoloration to Latino
Immigrants
Erin E. Masterson, BA Kristin S. Hoeft, MPH
Judith C. Barker, PhD Center to Address
Disparities in Childrens Oral Health University
of California San Francisco (Supported by NIDCR
grant U54 DE 14251)
2Dental Discoloration
- A broad range of dental discolorations can exist
in deciduous dentition (Sapir Refuat 2005 Hapeh
Vehashinayim 22(2)24-36 Sulieman 2005 Dent
Update 32463-71 Welbury 1997 Paediatric
Dentistry) - Range of colors in the clinical literature
- White/opaque through black
- Wide variety of causes for discoloration (many
ways to categorize one way is by
extrinsic/intrinsic causes) - Extrinsic- medicaments, oral hygiene, food,
beverages, smoking, etc. - Intrinsic- medicaments, genetics, trauma,
fluorosis, dental caries - Discerning the causes and clinical significance
of dental discoloration in children is an
extraordinarily complex issue
3Significance of Tooth Discoloration
- Relatively little research has been done on
parental perceptions of the significance of tooth
discoloration - Mostly concerning dental esthetics and
perceptions of fluorosis in children (Lalumandier
1998 JADA 1291000-1006 Shulman 2004 JADA
135595-604) - Dissatisfaction among parents, dentists and
children with severe levels of dental fluorosis
in children - Parents are concerned about the color of
childrens teeth (even when not caused by
fluorosis)
4Study Objective
- To investigate urban Latino immigrant caregivers
understandings of and behaviors surrounding tooth
discoloration, predominantly in children aged 1-5
years - To link observed dental discolorations and
care-seeking behaviors
5Methodology
- Convenience sample
- Primary caregiver of Mexican descent with at
least one child aged 5 years or less - Lived in a primarily low-income Latino
neighborhood in an urban center in northern
California - Recruited from preschools, community
organizations, community festivals, dental
clinics, and referred from other participants - Data was collected by open-ended interviews (most
in Spanish) and ethnographic observations - Interviews were recorded, translated and
transcribed - Two researchers independently read, coded and
analyzed the transcripts using NVivo Software
Package
6Study Sample Description
Caregiver Demographics (N38)
Children Demographics (N92)
At least 61 reported to have had caries
experience At least 18 reported to have had
discoloration
7Shades of Decay
- Parents discussed a limited range of colors to
describe tooth discoloration - 5 categories White, Beige, Yellow, Brown, Black
The three-year-old, my nephew, has black (negro)
teeth. I once told him that they even looked
green (verde). Yes! with insistent tone He
once came here and I brushed his teeth really
well, poor child. He even cried. His teeth
still looked black (negro). His teeth looked
black to the bone (a su huesito, negro).
8Discoloration and Spanish Terms
- A significant association was found between use
of darker shades of discoloration and Spanish
terms describing more severe conditions and
possible decay
9Structural Integrity of the Tooth
- Descriptions of structural damage to the tooth
was also used to describe severely discolored
teeth and was always associated with decay or
caries - Phrases such as Get smaller, fragile,
crumbling, falling apart, breaking, etc.
I dont know if thats what made her teeth get
so fragile (fragiles) and what made them go brown
(café), not yellow (amarillo), but brown (café).
Im telling you, her teeth would fall apart
(deshacer) on the inside I have seen many
children who have rotten (podridos) teeth. You
can see that their teeth at the front have
crumbled (malcomido). Ive seen that. Like I
said, her teeth started to break (romper) because
of the juice. I dont know what that is
called The teeth were not completely decayed
(picado), they were just yellowish (amarillento),
as if they were crumbling (malcomiendo) -not
black (negro) or anything. They decided to take
all his teeth out.
10Attributed Causes of Discoloration
(N34), Respondents could offer more than one
cause therefore percentages do not total 100.
11Discoloration and Care-Seeking
Indicates that 2 of the 3 cases described a
specific structural problem in addition to the
discoloration
12Discussion
- Only one study could be found in the literature
that describes how rural Latino child caregivers
respond to various stains or dental
discoloration in children (Horton Barker Comm
Dent Hlth in press) - The present study serves as an expansion of this
topic with a comparable urban population - Caregivers describe a wide range of colors and
generally associate discoloration with a level of
tooth disintegration
13Conclusion
- Need conclusion or straight into implications???
- Spanish terminology used to describe tooth
discoloration and its possible association with
decay is broad and complex (worth repeating???)
14Study Implications
- Dental practitioners need to know, not just the
terms, but the meanings of these terms to Latino
patients so that clear communication may lead to
development of appropriate caregiver responses to
dental discoloration and decay - More education is needed about early warning
signs of tooth decay - Black and structurally damaged teeth prompt
dental visits - Less severe discoloration might not prompt a
dental visit (highly dependent on income/access
to services)
15Support and Thanks
- Supported by NIDCR grant U54 DE 14251 and the
- Center to Address Disparities in Childrens
Oral Health - (CAN DO Center) at the University of
California at - San Francisco
- Thank you to the caregivers, community
organizations and others that participated in
this study - Research Team
- Judith C. Barker, PhD (PI)
- Sarah Horton, PhD
- Kristin Hoeft, MPH
- Erin Masterson, BA
- Jane A. Weintraub, DDS, MPH
- The CAN DO Center