Barriers to care-seeking for children's oral health among low-income caregivers

Susan E Kelly, Catherine J Binkley, William P Neace, Bruce S Gale, Susan E Kelly, Catherine J Binkley, William P Neace, Bruce S Gale

Abstract

Objectives: We identified psychosocial, structural, and cultural barriers to seeking dental care among nonutilizing caregivers of Medicaid-enrolled children.

Methods: We used Medicaid utilization records to identify utilizing and nonutilizing African American and White caregivers of Medicaid-enrolled children in Jefferson County, Kentucky. We conducted 8 focus groups (N=76) with a stratified random sample of responding caregivers; transcripts were qualitatively analyzed.

Results: Psychosocial factors associated with utilization included oral health beliefs, norms of caregiver responsibility, and positive caregiver dental experiences. Utilizing groups reported higher education; health beliefs included identifying oral health with overall health and professional preventive dental care with caregiver responsibility for children's overall health. These beliefs may mediate shared structural barriers, including transportation, school absence policies, discriminatory treatment, and difficulty locating providers who accept Medicaid. Expectation of poor oral health among some low-income caregivers was among factors identified with nonutilization.

Conclusions: Disadvantaged caregivers reported multiple barriers to accessing dental care for their children. Providers, Medicaid administrators, and schools must coordinate steps to encourage caregiver-controlled dental care, build trust, and link professional preventive dental care with caregiver responsibility for children's overall health.

Figures

FIGURE 1—
FIGURE 1—
Questions from the focus group moderator’s guide.
FIGURE 2—
FIGURE 2—
Access to Personal Health Care Services Model. Source. Data from Margolis et al.

Source: PubMed

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