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APHA Scientific Session and Event Listing
3250.0: Monday, November 05, 2007 - 12:30 PM

Abstract #160346

Roles of public health nurses to improve the dental health of low income urban mothers and their offspring

Katherine K. Kinsey, PhD, RN, FAAN1, Terence Young, MA2, Marie James, MHA, MHEd3, Patricia L. Gerrity, CNHP4, Nancy L. Rothman, EdD, RN5, Mary Beth Haas, MSN, CRNP6, Rita Lourie, MSN, MPH, RN5, Jane Pray, MSN4, Lisa Harris, MSN, MBA7, and Tine Hansen-Turton, MG7. (1) National Nursing Centers Consortium, Nurse-Family Partnership Collaborative of Philadelphia, 18th Floor, 260 S. Broad Street, Philadelphia, PA 19102, 609-865-6275, kkinsey501@cs.com, (2) Philadelphia Department of Public Health, Division of Maternal, Child and Family Health, 9th Floor, 1101 Market Street, Philadelphia, PA 19107, (3) Partners for Families, 212 E. Spruce Street, Norristown, PA 19401, (4) Community Health, Drexel University, 1505 Race Street, Mail Stop 501, Philadelphia, PA 19102-1192, (5) Department of Nursing, College of Health Professions, Temple University, 3307 N. Broad Street 602-00, Philadelphia, PA 19140, (6) Lutheran Children and Family Service, Nurse-Family Partnership, 5902 North Fifth Street, Philadelphia, PA 19120, (7) National Nursing Centers Consortium, NFP, 18th Floor, 260 S. Broad Street, Philadelphia, PA 19102

The disparate access to physical, mental and dental health for low income, urban minority groups is well documented. At risk populations for significant dental disease include underinsured mothers and their offspring who face significant challenges accessing and paying for routine and/or emergency dental care. All too frequently, dental practices have a cap on medical assistance patients and require the uninsured to “pay up front”. In addition, dental health education and screening is not a universal standard of care for all primary care providers. Therefore, lost opportunities to educate young mothers regarding 1) personal dental hygiene; 2) care of their infants' gums and “baby” teeth, 3) available, affordable dental health resources, and 4) routine six month dental check-ups abound. Consequently, too many mothers and their adult offspring face employment and social discrimination when their smiles reveal dental caries, misaligned and/or missing teeth. The Philadelphia Nurse-Family Partnership (NFP) team of public health nurses also notes that mothers with visible dental disease habitually cover their mouths to talk and are reluctant to give social “toothy” smiles. This paper provides an overview of the 2001- 2007 NFP program serving low income first time mothers-to-be and their offspring until the age of two years, and the 2006-2007 incorporation of a dental health questionnaire and teaching tool for NFP public health nurse home visitors to use at will with their NFP mothers. Emerging information and strategies to improve the dental health of NFP mothers and their babies are presented. Feedback from the nurses and participants is highlighted. The nurses have learned not to assume that 1) primary care providers (including prenatal providers) emphasis dental health; 2) families have toothbrushes; 3) mothers brush and floss their teeth daily; 3) mothers know how to access routine and emergency dental health resources for their families, and; 4) mothers value teeth as a natural resource. The role of public health nurses to improve the dental health of low income urban mothers and their offspring is emphasized. Discussion regarding the replication of the dental health questionnaire and teaching tool with other low income, at risk populations concludes the presentation.

Learning Objectives:

Keywords: Access to Care, Vulnerable Populations

Presenting author's disclosure statement:

Any relevant financial relationships? No
Any institutionally-contracted trials related to this submission?

I agree to comply with the American Public Health Association Conflict of Interest and Commercial Support Guidelines, and to disclose to the participants any off-label or experimental uses of a commercial product or service discussed in my presentation.

Maternal-Child Health and Wellness

The 135th APHA Annual Meeting & Exposition (November 3-7, 2007) of APHA