Global Child Dental Health Taskforce Announces Program to Improve Children's Oral Health in U.S.
09 Mayo 2007 - 1:25PM
PR Newswire (US)
NEW YORK, May 9 /PRNewswire/ -- The U.S. arm of the Global
Children's Dental Health Taskforce this week announces a new
initiative to improve the oral health of America's toddlers and
preschoolers. The initiative responds to a new federal report
showing that the number of toddlers and preschoolers in the U.S.
who have experienced tooth decay has risen to 28 percent -- and to
far higher levels among poor and minority children. The federal
report showed a 17 percent increase in tooth decay in the primary
(baby) teeth of children aged 2 to 5 years -- to 28 percent in
1999-2004 from 24 percent in 1988-1994, according to Taskforce
Chairman, Dr. Burton Edelstein of the Children's Dental Health
Project and Columbia University. The study also found that 74
percent of 2 to 11 year old children who have experienced tooth
decay have unfilled cavities. "Tooth decay remains the single most
common chronic disease of children in the U.S. -- five times more
common than asthma," noted pediatrician David Krol, Taskforce
Member and Chairman of Pediatrics at the University of Toledo
College of Medicine. "It is an insidious disease that starts early
and can devastate children's mouths long before they start school,"
he added. CDC data also show that for children aged 2 to 11 years
old, tooth decay is more common in low income and minority
children. The proportion of Mexican American and African American
children with unfilled cavities is 1.5 times greater than the
proportion of white children with untreated disease. Children in
poverty are more than twice as likely to have untreated cavities as
children in middle income and higher income families. "What these
statistics mean is that too many children suffer from preventable
dental disease," according to Taskforce Member Steven Kess, Vice
President of Henry Schein, an international healthcare product
distribution company. The U.S. Taskforce will focus its work on
opportunities to help pregnant women and new mothers safeguard
their children's oral health. The taskforce also plans to develop
model proposals for local cavity-prevention demonstrations in
lower-income communities in Baltimore Maryland, Los Angeles
California, Toledo Ohio, and at a Native American health services
site," according to Dr. Burton Edelstein, coordinator of the U.S.
effort and Chair of the Children's Dental Health Project, a
Washington D.C. policy organization that promotes children's oral
health. The U.S. Taskforce is one of nine, country-wide efforts
dedicated to eradicating tooth decay in children worldwide by 2026.
Participating countries represent over half of the world's child
population and also include Australia, Brazil, China, India,
Mexico, The Philippines, South Africa, and Saudi Arabia. It is an
informal group of leaders from federal health programs, health
professional associations, industry, and education who have come
together in support of the global effort. Strategies include health
education, fluorides, dental sealants, sugar reduction in schools,
access to dental care, leadership development, and advocacy. The
U.S. Taskforce efforts are guided by Healthy People 2010 objectives
that call for reducing childhood decay experience and expanding
dental services. The Taskforce promotes strategies that were
developed by the U.S. Surgeon General's Workshop on Children and
Oral Health in 2000. These include increasing public awareness
about the importance of early childhood oral health, using
science-based strategies, integrating oral health into other
childhood programs and medical care, promoting public policies, and
assuring services for all children. "The decision by the U.S.
component of our Global Taskforce to focus on young children holds
tremendous promise for better quality of life among millions of
U.S. children," said Global Taskforce coordinator Professor Raman
Bedi of Kings College in London. "Early childhood tooth decay
worldwide too often sets children up for dental pain and infection
that has consequences for their learning readiness, ability to eat,
sleep, and experience the normal activities of childhood." The
Global Taskforce was established in 2006 after 40 senior dental
advisors and chief dental officers called for its formation at the
European Union Presidency meeting in England in September 2005. It
is supported by the government of the United Kingdom in affiliation
with the World Health Organization and Colgate-Palmolive.
Colgate-Palmolive's support for the effort was announced one-year
ago by its President and CEO, Ian Cook, "as Colgate-Palmolive's
200th anniversary gift to children worldwide," according to Dr.
Marsha Butler, Colgate-Palmolive Vice President for Global Oral
Care and Professional Relations. "We are committed to this effort
and providing essential international support to the Global
Taskforce over the first five year start-up of this dynamic
effort," she added. Note to the Editor King's College London is the
fourth oldest University in England with more than 13,700
undergraduates and nearly 5,600 graduate students in nine schools
of study based at five London Campuses. It is a member of the
Russell Group, a coalition of the UK's major research-based
Universities. King's has a particularly distinguished reputation in
the humanities, law, international relations, medicine, nursing and
the sciences, and has played a major role in many of the advances
that have shaped modern life, such as the discovery of the
structure of DNA. It is the largest centre for the education of
healthcare professionals in Europe and is home to five Medical
Research Centres. About Colgate-Palmolive Colgate-Palmolive is a
leading global consumer products company, tightly focused on Oral
Care, Personal Care, Home Care and Pet Nutrition. Colgate sells its
products in over 200 countries and territories around the world
under such internationally recognized brand names as Colgate,
Palmolive, Mennen, Softsoap, Irish Spring, Protex, Sorriso,
Kolynos, Elmex, Ajax, Axion, Soupline, and Suavitel, as well as
Hill's Science Diet and Hill's Prescription Diet pet foods. For
more information about Colgate's global business, visit the
Company's website at http://www.colgate.com/. Contacts: Dr. Burton
Edelstein Dr. Raman Bedi 212-342-3505 011 44 207 915 2314
DATASOURCE: Colgate-Palmolive CONTACT: Dr. Burton Edelstein of the
Children's Dental Health Project and Columbia University,
+1-212-342-3505, ; or Dr. Raman Bedi of Kings College in London,
011-44-207-915-2314, Web site: http://www.colgate.com/
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