Oral Health Status of Healthcare Workers in Ilembula/Tanzania during the COVID-19 Condition.

Oral Health Status of Healthcare Workers in Ilembula/Tanzania during the COVID-19 Condition.

Publication date: Apr 29, 2024

The challenge of reduced dental treatment and education infrastructure in the Tanzanian highlands affects the oral health situation of both the general population and local healthcare workers. The aim of this study was to investigate the oral health status of healthcare workers at Ilembula Lutheran Hospital (ILH), Tanzania, during the COVID-19 pandemic. In total, 134 healthcare workers (62 women, 72 men; mean age 36. 48 +/- 9. 56 years, range 19-59 years; median age 35. 00 years) participated in this cross-sectional study, conducted from 12 February to 27 February. A dental examiner trained in oral health screening performed the oral health data collection. Data collection was performed by probability sampling using the Ilembula Data Collection Form-Oral Health (IDCF-Oral Health) questionnaire distributed in paper form. Ethical approval was obtained from the National Institute for Medical Research/Tanzania. The decayed, missing, and filled teeth (DMF/T) index proposed by the World Health Organization (WHO) was used with the associated caries measurement method and the simplified oral hygiene index (OHI-S). Details regarding edentulism, nutritional habits, and socio-economic factors were collected. Statistical analysis was performed using linear regression (α = 0. 05). The average DMF-T index was 3. 33 +/- 0. 82, with age, gender, meal frequency, and soft drink consumption significantly influencing the index. No evidence of dental plaque was detected in 43. 3% of the participants. Of the participants, 32. 8% required prosthetic treatment (Kennedy Class III), while 16. 4% needed it for acute malocclusions. Oral hygiene products were used in 97% of cases. A total of 35. 8% of the participants had an OHI-S score of up to 1. 0, with (p < 0. 001) age and (p < 0. 001) sex having a significant influence on the index. The current oral health situation of healthcare workers at ILH shows a moderate need for restorative and prosthetic treatment in rural Tanzania. Despite the COVID-19 pandemic, there was no change in the need for dental treatment, which may be explained by the generally restricted access to dental healthcare in the investigated region. The development of an interdisciplinary oral health prophylaxis system could help to reduce the need for future treatments.

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Concepts Keywords
Dental caries incidence
Healthcare epidemiology
Lutheran general oral health
Tanzania prosthetic treatment
Women Tanzania

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH Oral Health
disease MESH COVID-19
disease VO population
disease VO organization
disease VO frequency
disease MESH dental plaque
disease MESH periodontitis
disease MESH dental caries
drug DRUGBANK Coenzyme M
disease MESH periodontal diseases
disease IDO quality
drug DRUGBANK Etoperidone
disease MESH tooth loss
disease VO time
disease IDO process
disease MESH leprosy
disease VO leprosy vaccine
disease MESH tuberculosis
pathway KEGG Tuberculosis
disease MESH infectious diseases
disease MESH hepatitis
drug DRUGBANK Ethanol
disease IDO site
disease MESH diastema
disease MESH gingival recession
disease VO Gap
disease VO mouth
disease MESH bruxism
disease MESH abnormalities
disease MESH gingival hyperplasia
disease MESH candidiasis
disease VO USA
disease IDO history

Original Article

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