New initiative to improve child oral health in Manchester
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- Published: Thursday, 17 January 2019 07:26
- Written by News Editor
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Thousands of young children are to benefit from a new £1.5m programme aimed at transforming the dental health of under 5s across Greater Manchester. The new initiative will see supervised toothbrushing introduced in schools and nurseries plus dental care incorporated into health visitor checks in areas where particularly large numbers of young children suffer from tooth decay.
It was launched by the Greater Manchester Health and Social Care Partnership. The programme comes as a new national Public Health England (PHE) campaign is supporting families to cut back on sugar by encouraging parents and carers to ‘make a swap when you next shop’. Making simple everyday swaps can reduce children’s sugar intake from some yoghurts, sugary drinks and breakfast cereals by half – while giving them healthier versions of the foods and drinks they enjoy.
Four areas in Greater Manchester – Salford, Rochdale, Bolton and Oldham – are being targeted, after they have each been identified by the NHS and Public Health England as among the country’s top national priority areas for improving children’s oral health.
Working with local schools and nurseries in each area, the new Partnership programme aims to reach 90% of under 5’s in each area through activities including the following:
- introducing daily supervised toothbrushing in schools and nurseries for children aged 2 to 5 years
- training a network of dedicated ‘dental champions’, supported by expert external staff, to lead the way in improving dental care in early years settings
- distributing toothbrush/toothpaste packs through health visitor checks
- encouraging families to make dental visits in the first year of each child’s life
- improving access to quality dental services for those aged under 5.
Each activity aims to tackle the widespread impacts of high sugar diets and make regular toothbrushing the norm.
Claire Stevens, paediatric dentistry consultant at Manchester Foundation Trust and children’s oral health lead with the Partnership said: “This new initiative is aiming to tackle the very real problems we face in Greater Manchester with large numbers of young children experiencing significant tooth decay often before they even reach school age.
“Such problems can cause pain, sleepless nights and missed days of school for many children. Across Greater Manchester, this is adding to the daily challenges faced by many of our least well-off families and putting additional pressures on the NHS. Our new £1.5 million oral health programme will tackle these impacts and will hopefully play a vital role in our ambition of giving all of our children the best start in life.”
The Dental Check by One campaign, run by the British Society of Paediatric Dentistry, encourages all parents to ensure that children have their first dental check up by the age of one to help avoid future problems as they get older.
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