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Oral health profile of education and health professionals attending handicapped childrenDOI: 10.1590/S1517-74912003000100003 Keywords: school health services, education [dental], oral health, oral hygiene, disabled children. Abstract: the purpose of this study was to evaluate the knowledge and attitudes toward oral health of education and health professionals working in a children care program for handicapped children from 0 to 6 years of age, run by a public municipal institution in rio de janeiro. using a printed questionnaire, 67 professionals (teachers, attendants and health professionals) were interviewed. the results were compared to the children's oral hygiene habits, by directly observing their daily nursery routine. although 97.0% said that oral health could play a part in general health, only 37.3% of the professionals answered correctly on this matter. as for methods for preventing caries, although 92.5% said that they were aware of them, only 17.9% went to the dentist for preventive treatment. although the majority (81.3%) indicated oral hygiene as a way of preventing caries, observation showed that this practice is not always put into effect in the program's day nursery. regarding when to start toothbrushing in children, 75.0% of the teachers and 94.4% of the health professionals said that they were aware of the need to begin brushing before one year of age, although this reply was given by only 52.5% of the attendants (chi-square, p = 0.006). in view of these results, it was concluded that attitudes toward oral health were not always coherent with the knowledge that these professionals express.
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