RSS

$1.2 million pilot program to help 25,000 kids fight tooth decay

August 25, 2011 | | Comments 0

By Beth Musgrave
bmusgrave@herald-leader.com

LEXINGTON — About 25,000 school children in 16 Eastern Kentucky counties will receive a free fluoride tooth varnish treatment this school year in an effort to improve the region’s high rate of child tooth decay.

A $1 million grant from the Appalachian Regional Commission will fund most of the program, which will provide the fluoride varnish treatment to children in 1st through 5th grades in selected schools in Bell, Breathitt, Clay, Elliott, Floyd, Harlan, Jackson, Knott, Knox, Lee, Magoffin, Menifee, Owsley, Perry, Russell and Wolfe counties. The state also will pay about $250,000 for the program.

Gov. Steve Beshear, speaking at a news conference at the University of Kentucky Dental School, said the program is the latest effort of an initiative he created in 2009 called Healthy Smiles Kentucky.

“We know that children learn best when they are healthy,” Beshear said. “We also know that dental health is a key component of overall health.”

In 2001, research showed that half of Kentucky’s children had decay in their primary teeth and nearly half of children ages 2, 3, and 4 had untreated dental problems.

The UK Dental School will perform oral exams on some of the children to determine the condition of their teeth before the first preventative fluoride treatment is applied. The students will receive two treatments about four to six months apart.

The students will then be examined to determine how effective the treatment is in stopping tooth decay, said Dr. Sharon Turner, dean of the UK Dental School.

The preventative fluoride treatment takes less than a minute to apply and has been used to prevent decay, slow the process of decay and even reverse the beginning steps of decay, Turner said.

A group of dentists in Clark County have been using the fluoride treatment in schools there and have seen dramatic results. Researchers hope the state’s program will duplicate that success.

“Documenting that it works gives us leverage to start the program throughout the state,” Turner said.

Children in the selected schools will be given the opportunity to have a dental screening, according to health officials. In addition, the state Department of Public Health will also be promoting children’s oral health in Eastern Kentucky to increase awareness of the problem.

Commenting on Bluegrass Politics has been temporarily disabled due to technical difficulties, but you can still sound off about this story on our Facebook page: www.facebook.com/bluegrasspolitics.

Share

Filed Under: Social ServicesState GovernmentSteve Beshear

About the Author:

RSSComments (0)

Trackback URL

Comments are closed.