The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Scotland blazing a trail in children’s dental health

80% of Primary 7 pupils show no sign of decay on teeth

- STEFAN MORKIS smorkis@thecourier.co.uk

Scotland is leading the way in the battle to reduce tooth decay in children, a Dundee expert has claimed.

New figures released as part of the National Dental Inspection Programme yesterday revealed that 80% of Primary 7 pupils in Scotland have no sign of decay on permanent teeth.

This is up from just over half (53%) when records began in 2005.

Tayside is marginally below the national average, with 79.4% of children showing no sign of obvious decay, while Fife performs slightly better, with 80.7% of Primary 7 children showing no signs of decay.

However, the figures show children from Scotland’s poorest areas are more likely to show decay than those from better-off areas.

Nearly seven out of 10 children from the most deprived areas (69.5%) show no signs of decay compared to nearly nine out of 10 (88.5%) from the most affluent.

Professor Nicola Innes from Dundee University said the improvemen­t in oral health is down to the groundbrea­king ChildSmile programme.

Introduced across Scotland in 2011, the programme includes toothbrush­ing at nursery and the early years of primary school and fluoride varnishing of teeth.

Professor Innes said: “The thing that has had the most impact on oral health across Scotland is ChildSmile.

“Things like the sugar tax have had some benefit and hopefully it will have some impact on teeth.”

Meanwhile, the British Dental Associatio­n (BDA) has called on the Scottish Government to renew its efforts to tackle deep inequaliti­es by investing more on prevention and local resources.

Robert Donald, chairman of the BDA’s Scottish Council, said: “There has been a slight reduction in the inequaliti­es gap, but the difference remains stark.

“Ministers need to ensure that not only is the overall improvemen­t sustained, but also make every effort to tackle inequaliti­es in the oral health of our children.”

Public health minister Joe FitzPatric­k said: “These statistics show that the dental health of children across Scotland continues to improve, with no obvious signs of decay in four out of five P7 children – up from around half in 2005.

“This report also shows a narrowing in oral health inequaliti­es, which is encouragin­g.”

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