Saudi Dental Journal (Apr 2024)

Dental decay in children and the link to weight status: A cross-sectional analysis of national school health data

  • Arwa Alhamed,
  • Abdullah Al-Zeer,
  • Fahad Alsaawi,
  • Abdulrahman Alshaikh,
  • Abrar Alzaher,
  • Abdullah Alkattan,
  • Noura Alrasheed,
  • Khlood Sagor,
  • Elham Alsalem,
  • Mona Ibrahim,
  • Amjad Alfaleh

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 36, no. 4
pp. 533 – 538

Abstract

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Recent national reports have indicated an increasing trend of dental decay among school-aged children. National school-based data are required to guide decision-making to ensure effective public health efforts to manage dental decay. This study aimed to assess the prevalence of dental decay among school-age children in Saudi Arabia and explore the possible link between dental decay and weight status. This was a cross-sectional analysis of a national sample including 1,134,317 Saudi children in the 1st, 4th, 7th, and 10th grades who participated in a national school screening program. Data for weight, height, body mass index (BMI), dental decay prevalence, and decayed, missing, and filled teeth (DMFT) index were analysed. An independent t-test, one-way analysis of variance, and chi-square test were used to compare the means, while Pearson’s r correlation and multiple linear regression were used to examine the relationships between the study variables. The prevalence of dental decay was 24.20%, and dental decay was the highest among female students (26.5%), students in primary school (25.9%), students living in the eastern region (35.2%), in the administrative capital (27.6%), and in rural areas (23.4%). Dental decay was the highest among students who were underweight. Female sex and living in rural areas significantly predicted higher DMFT while being overweight/obese significantly predicted lower DMFT. Dental decay is highly prevalent among underweight students, female students, and students living in rural areas and the eastern regions of Saudi Arabia. To reduce the prevalence of dental decay and related health disparities, dental health screening programs should be designed to detect dental decay early among children at high risk due to abnormal BMIs and sociodemographic factors. In addition, dental health screening and management programs should utilize standardized dental decay assessment methods and ethnically representative growth charts.

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