Chronic Disease Management Strategies of Early Childhood Caries: Support from the Medical and Dental Literature

Pediatr Dent. 2015 May-Jun;37(3):281-7.

Abstract

An Institute of Medicine report places chronic disease management (CDM) as an intervention on a treatment spectrum between prevention and acute care. CDM commonly focuses on conditions in which patient self-care efforts are significant. Framing early childhood caries (ECC) as such a chronic condition invites dentistry to reconsider its approach to caries management and shift gears from a strictly surgical approach to one that also incorporates a medical approach. This paper's purpose was to explore the definition of and concepts inherent in CDM. An explanatory model is introduced to describe the multiple factors that influence ECC-CDM strategies. Reviewed literature suggests that early evidence from ECC-CDM interventions, along with results of pediatric asthma and diabetes CDM, supports CDM of ECC as a valid approach that is independent of both prevention and repair. Early results of ECC-CDM endeavors have demonstrated a reduction in rates of new cavitation, dental pain, and referral to the operating room compared to baseline rates. ECC-CDM strategies hold strong promise to curtail caries activity while complementing dental repair when needed, thereby reducing disease progression and cavity recurrence. Institutionalizing ECC-CDM will both require and benefit from evolving health care delivery and financing systems that reward positive health outcomes.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Child, Preschool
  • Chronic Disease*
  • Community Networks
  • Dental Caries / prevention & control
  • Dental Caries / therapy*
  • Disease Management*
  • Health Behavior
  • Health Education, Dental
  • Humans
  • Infant
  • Oral Health
  • Patient Care Team
  • Self Care