Objectives-This pragmatic randomized trial evaluated the effectiveness of a tailored educational intervention on oral health behaviors and new untreated carious lesions in low-income African-American children in Detroit, Michigan.Methods-Participating families were recruited in a longitudinal study of the determinants of dental caries in 1,021 randomly selected children (0-5 years) and their caregivers. The families were examined at baseline in 2002-04 (Wave I), 2004-05 (Wave II) and 2007 (Wave III). Prior to Wave II, the families were randomized into two educational groups. An interviewer trained in applying motivational interviewing principles (MI) reviewed the dental exam findings with caregivers assigned to the intervention group (MI+DVD) and engaged the caregiver in a dialogue on the importance of and potential actions for improving the child's oral health. The interviewer and caregiver watched a special 15-minute DVD developed specifically for this project based on data collected at Wave I and focused on how the caregivers can "keep their children free from tooth decay". After the MI session the caregivers developed their own preventive goals. Some families in this group chose not to develop goals and were offered the project-developed goals. The goals, if defined, were printed on glossy paper that included the child's photograph. Families in the second group (DVD-only) were met by an interviewer, shown the DVD, and provided with the project's recommended goals. Both groups of families received a copy of the DVD. Families in the MI+DVD group received booster calls within 6 months of the intervention. Both caregivers and the children were interviewed and examined after approximately 2 years (Wave III: 2007).Results-After 6-month of follow-up, caregivers receiving MI+DVD were more likely to report checking the child for "pre-cavities" and making sure the child brushes at bedtime. Evaluation of the final outcomes approximately 2 years later found that caregivers receiving the MI+DVD were still more likely to report making sure the child brushed at bedtime, yet were no more likely to make sure the child brushed twice per day. Despite differences in one of the reported behaviors, children whose caregivers received the motivational intervention did not have fewer new untreated lesions at the final evaluation.Conclusions-This study found that a single motivational interviewing intervention may change some reported oral health behaviors, it failed to reduce the number of new untreated carious lesions.
A multifaceted social marketing campaign including radio ads, billboards, and education sessions can effectively target a high-risk population and that given an outlet could result in a significant number of people getting screened at a relatively low cost.
Studies of patients in the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) health system and elsewhere have documented elevated mortality from suicide during a critical period within 30 to 90 days after discharge from inpatient mental health units. To support program planning, VA evaluated whether the elevated mortality during this critical period was specific to suicide or whether there were similar increases in other causes of death.Methods: Indicators of age, gender, inpatient diagnoses, and suicide attempts and ideation from VA records were combined with indicators of vital status and cause of death from the National Death Index. Analyses compared all-cause and cause-specific mortality in the first 30 and 90 days postdischarge with mortality in days 91 to 365 after discharge for the 106,430 VA patients discharged from inpatient mental health units in 2013-2014.Results: Elevated mortality during the first 30 and first 90 days after discharge was not specific to suicide. Higher rates of all-cause mortality were noted, including elevated mortality due to external causes other than suicide among young and middle-aged patients (ages 18-64) during the first 30 days and among older patients ($65) during the first 90 days. An increase in natural-cause mortality among older patients was attributable to greater mortality among those with dementia diagnoses.Conclusions: Elevated rates of nonsuicide external-cause mortality in the critical period within 30 to 90 days after discharge from inpatient mental health care suggest important opportunities for prevention. Greater mortality among patients with dementia or related neurodegenerative diseases raises questions regarding current strategies for managing behavioral symptoms and transitions to end-oflife care.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.