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Testing a Tooth Decay Prevention Program With Cree Mothers and Infants
This study is currently recruiting participants.
Study NCT00175318   Information provided by University of British Columbia
First Received: September 9, 2005   Last Updated: June 18, 2008   History of Changes

September 9, 2005
June 18, 2008
April 2005
September 2009   (final data collection date for primary outcome measure)
Dental health status of children 30 months of age in test and control communities [ Time Frame: 24 months ] [ Designated as safety issue: No ]
Dental health status of children 30 months of age in test and control communities
Complete list of historical versions of study NCT00175318 on ClinicalTrials.gov Archive Site
Mothers' beliefs about child dental health, children's dental health practices, and the negative health outcomes of dental caries assessed at project's end. [ Time Frame: 24 months ] [ Designated as safety issue: No ]
Mothers’ beliefs about child dental health, children’s dental health practices, and the negative health outcomes of dental caries assessed at project’s end.
 
Testing a Tooth Decay Prevention Program With Cree Mothers and Infants
A Clinical Trial of the Effectiveness of Motivational Interviewing as a Preventive Strategy for Dental Caries in Cree Infants

Dental decay is an alarming problem in Cree children. The intervention is a behavioural counseling approach called Motivational Interviewing (MI). The dental health of young children in communities whose mothers had a series of MI sessions provided by Cree women will be compared to the dental health of mothers who did not have the intervention.

Dental decay is an alarming problem in Cree children. The intervention is a behavioural counseling approach called Motivational Interviewing (MI). The dental health of young children in communities whose mothers had a series of MI sessions provided by Cree women will be compared to the dental health of mothers who did not have the intervention.

The proposed randomized controlled trial, involving Cree mothers and children in Eeyou Istchee, will test the effectiveness of an innovative, one-on-one counseling program called Motivational Interviewing (MI). In keeping with Cree philosophy and traditions, MI allows mothers to choose from a "menu" of preventive dental behaviours. The primary research question is whether there will be any difference in the dental health status of Cree children from communities where mothers have participated in MI interventions, compared to children from communities where mothers received information by more traditional means (pamphlets). This question will be answered by testing the hypothesis that the prevalence of caries among children 30 months of age will be lower in experimental "MI" communities than in control communities. The secondary questions are whether Cree mothers' beliefs about child dental health, children's dental health practices, and the negative health outcomes of ECC will be altered in MI communities compared to control communities.

Trial design: Over the past two years, the project team has undertaken extensive community consultation to better understand the problem of dental caries in young Cree children, and to seek community input for the project. The design is single blind, with cluster randomization by community, and two treatment groups. A total study sample of 309 mother-child pairs accounts for attrition of 15% over 3 years, and for infant mortality. The power is 82% to detect a 20% reduction in caries prevalence. The "experimental" treatment, MI, will assist mothers to choose from a menu of various age-appropriate, preventive options. The first intervention will occur during pregnancy, followed by regular MI sessions beginning at the child's 2-month immunization until 24 months of age. Local Cree dental assistants, following training and calibration in the MI technique, will do the counseling. Beginning at 12 months of age, regular application of fluoride varnish will be an option that a mother in the MI group may choose for her child. Control families will receive dental health information from a pamphlet, and will have access to fluoride varnish at local dental clinics.

Outcomes assessment: To answer the first research question, calibrated dentists from outside of Eeyou Istchee will do dental examinations for children at 30+3 months of age. Mothers will complete questionnaires to answer the secondary questions. The primary statistical analysis will be a comparison of caries prevalence in intervention and control groups, using a permutation test with test statistic equal to the difference between caries prevalences in the two groups. A significance level will be determined using the exact permutation distribution of the test statistic, which will be computed by enumerating all possible random assignments of villages to intervention or control conditions according to the randomization scheme..

 
Interventional
Other, Randomized, Open Label, Active Control, Single Group Assignment, Efficacy Study
Dental Caries
Behavioral: Motivational Interviewing
 
 

*   Includes publications given by the data provider as well as publications identified by National Clinical Trials Identifier (NCT ID) in Medline.
 
Recruiting
309
September 2009
September 2009   (final data collection date for primary outcome measure)

Inclusion Criteria:

First Nations women from the 9 communities of Eeyou Istchee (Cree territory of James Bay, Quebec) who are pregnant or have a pre-dentate infant l

Exclusion Criteria:

Female
14 Years to 48 Years
Yes
Contact: Juliana Snowboy-Matoush JSnowboy@ssss.gouv.qc.ca
Canada
 
NCT00175318
Dr. Rosamund Harrison, Univerisity of British Columbia
B04-0295, PG14R90995
University of British Columbia
 
Principal Investigator: Rosamund Harrison, PhD University of British Columbia
University of British Columbia
June 2008

ICMJE     Data element required by the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors and the World Health Organization ICTRP