Concerns over children's teeth

1 May 2003

The end of the 1990s brought an increase in the number of decayed, missing or filled deciduous (baby) teeth in Australian children, according to a report released in April 2003 by the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW).

There was also a corresponding drop in the percentage of children with no experience of tooth decay.

The report, The Child Dental Health Survey, Australia 1999: Trends across the 1990s, gives an insight into changes in children's oral health at the end of the 20th century. It involved a survey of nearly 372,000 children in 1999, with data obtained being compared with previous surveys.

Report co-author Jason Armfield said: 'While the dental health of Australia's children is generally very good in world terms, at the very least there is no room for complacency.

'The increases in decayed, missing or filled baby teeth were most evident for 5-year-olds, who, for example, experienced a 22 per cent increase in decayed teeth between 1996 and 1999. An 8 per cent increase was experienced by 6-year-olds across this same period.

'Furthermore, the 10 per cent of 6-year-olds who had the most decay experience in 1999 had more than 5 times the number of decayed, missing or filled baby teeth (about 8 teeth per child) than the national average.

'These data follow 2 decades of recorded declines in decay experience in children. They show a trend of increases in decay in younger children, and that some children have very high levels of decay.'

The report also shows that out of 38 countries for which comparable national data are available, Australia had the second lowest average number of decayed, missing or filled permanent teeth in 12-year-old children.


 
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