Affiliation:
1. Universidade de São Paulo, Brasil
2. Universidade Metodista de São Paulo, Brasil
Abstract
The present study describes the experience of dental caries in Indians communities of the Xingu, in order to supply parameters for further analysis of trends of the disease in Indians. We performed oral health examination in 288 Indians from four communities (Yawalapiti, Aweti, Mehinaku and Kamaiura) living in the southern part of the Xingu National Park, using international criteria defined by the World Health Organization. The outcome measures were the DMFT and dmft scores, and the care index. Indians of the Upper Xingu presented high levels of caries, in all age groups. The average DMFT for 11 to 13-year-old children - 5.93 - was lower than the index measured in 1993 for 12-year-old schoolchildren in nearby cities - 8.23 -, whose United Nations' human development index ranked medium. However, Indians presented a much lower care index, per age group, than these cities, and a high ratio of missing teeth for persons above 20 years old. These observations indicate low incorporation of dental care services. The irregularity of the services programmed for these communities, and the changing dietary and cultural patterns, mainly derived from their contact with the non-indigenous population of Brazil, reinforce the pressing need for health promotion initiatives aimed at these groups.
Subject
Infectious Diseases,General Medicine
Reference20 articles.
1. Enciclopédia Brasileira de Odontologia;ANDO T.,1986
2. Levantamento do índice CPOD: média por idade;DETOGNI A.M.;Rev. Ass. bras. Odont. Nac.,1994
3. Plaque, caries, periodontal diseases and acculturation among Yanomamö Indians, Venezuela;DONNELLY C.J.;Community Dent. oral Epidem.,1977
4. Encontro de sociedades: índios e brancos no Brasil;GALVÃO E.,1979
5. Caries experience of Native children of British Columbia, Canada, 1980-1988;HARRISON R.L.;Community Dent. oral Epidem.,1993
Cited by
23 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献