Factors affecting the use of dental services among Arab children in Israel: a qualitative study.

IF 3.5 4区 医学 Q1 HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES
Mohammad Khatib, Yael Ashkenazi, Yoav Loeff, Shlomo Paul Zusman, Lena Natapov
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Abstract

Background: In 2010, Israel reformed its hitherto dominantly privately financed dental services and included preventative and restorative dental care for children in the publicly-funded basket of healthcare services. A survey conducted by Brookdale Institute, found that only 67% of low-income Israeli-Arab children were using the new service (compared to 85% of Jewish children) while the majority of others continue using privately funded services. The aim of this study is to explore and explain Israeli-Arab children's low utilization of publicly-funded preventive and restorative dental care.

Methods: A qualitative study designed to describe and understand the parents' motivations and choices. As a preliminary stage, eight semi-structured interviews were conducted with directors of HMO dental departments and Israeli-Arab dentists. In the second stage, ten one-on-one interviews with parents, and five focus group discussions with 55 parents held on February-March 2017. All discussions in the focus groups were conducted in Arabic and each group was moderated by one of the research team accompanied by another person who documented and recorded the discussion. All interviews and discussions were recorded, transcribed in full and translated into Hebrew.

Results: The prevalent attitude is that one goes to the dentist only when there is a serious problem. The importance of preventive care is not appreciated. A childhood fear of the drill is very remembered and passed onto the children. Social and cultural factors such as kinship with service providers (GPs and dentists) influence the choice and utilization of health services. Economic barriers are still existing since even the small co-payment is daunting to low-income parents of large families. Provision of the public service is inadequate in some Arab villages.

Conclusions: The extension of Israel's National Health Insurance Law's basket of services to include dental care for children, while important, is not sufficiently embraced by Israeli Arab children. The remaining barriers include poor living conditions, low educational level that requires very clear sharing of information about the new service, and the resistance of cultural and social traditions. Public dental services providers should focus on conveying relevant oral health messages to the parents too, either through their children or directly.

影响以色列阿拉伯儿童使用牙科服务的因素:一项定性研究。
背景:2010年,以色列改革了迄今为止主要由私人供资的牙科服务,并将儿童预防性和恢复性牙科护理纳入公共供资的一揽子保健服务。布鲁克代尔研究所进行的一项调查发现,只有67%的低收入以色列裔阿拉伯儿童在使用这项新服务(相比之下,犹太儿童的这一比例为85%),而其他大多数人继续使用私人资助的服务。本研究的目的是探讨和解释以色列-阿拉伯儿童对公共资助的预防性和恢复性牙科护理的低利用率。方法:采用定性研究方法,描述和理解家长的动机和选择。作为初步阶段,与卫生组织牙科部门主任和以色列-阿拉伯牙医进行了8次半结构化访谈。第二阶段于2017年2月至3月进行了10次家长一对一访谈和5次家长焦点小组讨论。焦点小组的所有讨论都以阿拉伯语进行,每个小组由一名研究小组成员主持,并由另一名记录和记录讨论的人员陪同。所有的采访和讨论都被记录下来,全部抄写并翻译成希伯来语。结果:普遍的态度是只有在有严重问题时才去看牙医。预防保健的重要性没有得到重视。童年时对演习的恐惧是非常清楚的,并传递给了孩子们。社会和文化因素,如与服务提供者(全科医生和牙医)的亲属关系,影响保健服务的选择和利用。经济障碍仍然存在,因为即使是小额的共同支付也会让大家庭的低收入父母望而生畏。一些阿拉伯村庄提供的公共服务不足。结论:将以色列《国民健康保险法》的一揽子服务扩大到包括儿童牙科保健,虽然很重要,但没有得到以色列阿拉伯儿童的充分接受。其余的障碍包括恶劣的生活条件,教育水平低,需要非常明确地分享有关新服务的信息,以及文化和社会传统的抵制。公立牙科服务提供者亦应透过子女或直接向家长传递相关的口腔健康讯息。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.20
自引率
4.40%
发文量
38
审稿时长
28 weeks
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