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Oral health investigations of indigenous participants in remote settings: a methods paper describing the dental component of wave III of an Australian Aboriginal birth cohort study

机译:偏远地区土著参与者的口腔健康调查:描述澳大利亚原住民出生队列研究中第三波的牙齿成分的方法论文

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Background A prospective Aboriginal Birth Cohort (ABC) study has been underway in Australia's Northern Territory since 1987. Inclusion of oral epidemiological information in a follow-up study required flexible and novel approaches with unconventional techniques. Documenting these procedures may be of value to researchers interested in including oral health components in remotely-located studies. The objectives are to compare and describe dental data collection methods in wave III of the ABC study with a more conventional oral health investigation. Methods The Australian National Survey of Adult Oral Health (NSAOH) was considered the 'conventional' study. Differences between this investigation and the dental component of the ABC study were assessed in terms of ethics, location, recruitment, consent, privacy, equipment, examination, clinical data collection and replication. In the ABC study, recording of clinical data by different voice recording techniques were described and assessed for ease-of-use portability, reliability, time-efficiency and cost-effectiveness. Results Conventional investigation recruitment was by post and telephone. Participants self presented. Examinations took place in dental clinics, using customised dental chairs with standard dental lights attached. For all examinations, a dental assistant recorded dental data directly onto a laptop computer. By contrast, follow-up of ABC study participants involved a multi-phase protocol with reliance on locally-employed Indigenous advocates bringing participants to the examination point. Dental examinations occurred in settings ranging from health centre clinic rooms to improvised spaces outdoors. The dental chair was a lightweight, portable reclining camp chair and the dental light a fire-fighter's head torch with rechargeable batteries. The digital voice recorder was considered the most suitable instrument for clinical dental data collection in the ABC study in comparison with computer-based voice-recording software. Conclusion Oral health examinations among indigenous populations residing in predominantly remote locations are more logistically challenging than are surveys of the general population. However, lack of resources or conventional clinical infrastructures need not compromise the collection of dental data in such studies. Instead, there is a need to be flexible and creative in establishing culturally-sensitive environments with available resources, and to consider non-conventional approaches to data gathering.
机译:背景技术自1987年以来,澳大利亚北部地区一直在进行前瞻性原住民出生队列(ABC)研究。在后续研究中纳入口腔流行病学信息需要采用非常规技术的灵活新颖方法。记录这些程序可能对有兴趣在远程研究中包括口腔健康成分的研究人员有价值。目的是比较和描述ABC研究第III阶段中牙科数据收集方法以及更常规的口腔健康调查。方法澳大利亚国家成人口腔健康调查(NSAOH)被视为“常规”研究。根据伦理,地点,招募,同意,隐私,设备,检查,临床数据收集和复制,评估了该调查与ABC研究的牙科成分之间的差异。在ABC研究中,描述了通过不同的语音记录技术记录临床数据并评估了易用性,可靠性,时间效率和成本效益。结果常规调查的招募是通过邮电方式进行的。参与者自我介绍。使用带有标准牙科灯的定制牙科椅在牙科诊所进行检查。对于所有检查,牙科助手都会将牙科数据直接记录到便携式计算机上。相比之下,ABC研究参与者的随访涉及多阶段协议,依赖于本地雇用的土著倡导者将参与者带到检查点。从保健中心诊所室到临时的户外场所,都进行了牙科检查。牙科椅是一种轻便的便携式可躺式露营椅,牙科灯则是装有可充电电池的消防员头部手电筒。与基于计算机的语音记录软件相比,数字语音记录器被认为是ABC研究中最适合临床牙科数据收集的工具。结论在居住在主要偏远地区的土著居民中,进行口腔健康检查比对一般人口进行调查在后勤方面更具挑战性。然而,在此类研究中,资源或常规临床基础设施的缺乏并不会损害牙科数据的收集。取而代之的是,在利用可用资源建立对文化敏感的环境时,需要灵活创新,并考虑采用非常规的数据收集方法。

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