Overcoming Barriers to Implementing Policies to Reduce Sugar Consumption for Dental Caries Prevention

NIH RePORTER · NIH · K08 · $174,798 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

PROJECT SUMMARY/ABSTRACT The goal of this K08 award is for Dr. Kearns, a dentist scientist at the University of California, San Francisco, to gain support and training to become an independent investigator focused on translational research that encourages the use of evidence-based public health interventions to promote oral and overall health. Excess added sugars consumption leads to increased risk for cardiovascular disease, obesity, type 2 diabetes, and dental caries. While various evidence-based policies and programs have been developed to reduce sugar consumption in multiple-settings, to date, these strategies have not been widely adopted. The dental profession, comprised of numerous stakeholders (e.g., dental organizations, dental leaders, dentists), has the potential to help close this evidence to policy gap. Similar to efforts to support community water fluoridation, the dental profession can encourage innovative solutions to dental caries by engaging in sugar reduction policy dissemination (SRPD) behaviors (e.g., preparing issue briefs, publishing consensus statements, conducting policy research and surveillance, engaging with state coalitions, doing media outreach, and delivering office- based communication, among others.) However, dentist stakeholder involvement in sugar reduction policy and program dissemination is low. The overarching objective of this K08 proposal is to facilitate implementing an evidence-based intervention designed to increase dentist stakeholder engagement in SRPD. This K08 project aims to identify barriers and facilitators to dentist stakeholders' involvement in SRPD and to develop and pilot test an intervention that will increase dentists' SRPD behaviors. A carefully devised training plan will allow the candidate to gain expertise in dissemination and implementation (D&I) science, in-depth interviews and focus groups, quantitative methods and survey statistics, policy-relevant experimental methods to foster provider behavior change, and in grantwriting. Training goals will be achieved through rigorous mentorship from experts, graduate-level coursework, and advanced professional development activities. The proposed research project is congruent with training goals. Aim 1 includes an analysis of sugar industry public relations campaigns to identify the techniques used to influence dentist stakeholders' SRPD behaviors. Aim 2-Study A includes in- depth interviews with dentist leaders to identify facilitators and barriers to SRPD behaviors and to help identify questionnaire items for Aim 2-Study B, a large, nationally representative-survey of US licensed dentists to determine the relationship between drivers of SRPD behaviors and actual SRPD behaviors. Aim 3 involves developing and pilot testing an intervention strategy to change dentist stakeholders SRPD behaviors. The long-term objective of this research is to speed the translation of the US Dietary Guidelines added sugar recommendation into policy and practice. Thi...

Key facts

NIH application ID
10210381
Project number
5K08DE028947-02
Recipient
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, SAN FRANCISCO
Principal Investigator
Cristin Elizabeth Kearns
Activity code
K08
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2021
Award amount
$174,798
Award type
5
Project period
2020-07-06 → 2025-06-30