Validating a Conceptual Model on Topical Fluoride Hesitancy With Latino Parents

Author:

Cruz Stephanie1,Holland Haley1,Chi Donald L.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA

Abstract

Fluoride hesitancy is a growing public health challenge and interventions to address it may need to be tailored for minoritized subgroups to address oral health inequities. The goals of this qualitative study were to investigate the extent to which an existing conceptual model on topical fluoride hesitancy is applicable to Latino parents and whether applicability differed between Spanish-speaking Latino (SL) and English-speaking Latino (EL) parents. We conducted semi-structured one-on-one interviews with non-Latino English-speaking parents ( N = 50), SL parents ( n = 8), and EL parents ( n = 8). We coded the transcripts deductively and compared our findings both qualitatively and quantitatively to an existing model on topical fluoride hesitancy comprising 21 categories classified into six domains. We compared frequencies across model domains and categories for Latino versus non-Latino parents as well as for SL versus EL parents. Latino parents were represented across all six domains and 21 categories of the conceptual model. Comparing Latino and non-Latino parents, representation was similar across Domains 1 to 3 (necessity, chemicals, and harm); Latino parents were more highly represented in Domains 4 to 6 (uncertainty, pressure, and choice) compared with non-Latino parents. A larger proportion of EL parents thought a healthy diet was more important than fluoride (Category 1d) and a larger proportion of SL parents felt they did not know enough about fluoride (Category 4a). An existing conceptual model on topical fluoride hesitancy was generally a good fit for SL and EL parents. However, differential representation across model categories suggests that fluoride-related communication and intervention approaches may need to be tailored to Latino parents based on language preference.

Funder

National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Reference34 articles.

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4. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2019). Oral health surveillance report: Trends in dental caries and sealants, tooth retention, and edentulism, United States, 1999–2004 to 2011–2016. US Department of Health and Human Services. https://www.cdc.gov/oralhealth/publications/OHSR-2019-index.html

5. Parent Refusal of Topical Fluoride for Their Children

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