Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Giorgio Menghini is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Giorgio Menghini.


European Journal of Oral Sciences | 2008

Changes in oral health over a 10-yr period in Switzerland.

Nicola U. Zitzmann; Katharina Staehelin; A.W.G. Walls; Giorgio Menghini; Roland Weiger; Elisabeth Zemp Stutz

The Swiss Health Surveys are conducted every 5 yr, and alternate surveys contain information on oral health. Worldwide the population is ageing and oral health is improving. The aim of this study was to identify if these trends are continuing in a relatively affluent society with low levels of edentulousness. Participants in the 1992 and 2002 surveys completed a written questionnaire including items on oral health (response rates 75% and 86% respectively). Data were weighted and bivariate analyses were performed to calculate the average number of missing teeth and the prevalence of different prosthetic dental restorations for each cohort. Over the 10-yr period the proportion of subjects retaining all natural teeth increased, and the mean number of teeth increased, on average, by 1.3. Among those who required prosthetic dental restorations, fixed restorations increased and complete denture use was reduced. Strikingly, 4.4% of this sample reported having oral implants in 2002. Greater numbers of missing teeth and a higher prevalence of use of removable prostheses were still seen in women, in those who had only completed compulsory education, in subjects from families with low income, in those who smoke, and in those who were overweight, in 2002.


Therapeutische Umschau | 2008

[Early childhood caries--facts and prevention].

Giorgio Menghini; Marcel Steiner; Thomas Imfeld

In 2003, 771 randomly selected two-year-old children from the town of Zurich were examined. Teeth with carious cavities were observed in 12.6% of the children. Caries including initial (not yet cavitated) lesions was seen in 25.3% of children. Caries prevalence was strongly associated with immigrant background. Caries was found in 7.5% of Swiss children and in 38.5% of children from ex-Jugoslavia. 5% of children of mothers born in Switzerland, and 17.4% of children of mothers not born in Switzerland showed caries. The average number of teeth with carious lesions in children with caries was 4.3 irrespective of immigrant or Swiss background. This finding suggests that all kids with caries had similar risk behaviours. Multivariate logistic regressions elucidated the behavioural components associated with caries. The presence of plaque and the use of a night-time bottle proved to be the strongest predictor variables for caries. Frequent drinking of sugared non-milk drinks, age and no pacifier use were further risk indicators in children of foreign-born mothers. A significant improvement of oral health of small children can be achieved by a concerted action of child welfare consultants, paediatricians and carers of day-nurseries. The primary goal is to convince parents to actively participate in preserving dental health of their offsprings. The following recommendations should be adhered to: 1. Parents should brush the teeth of the children daily, using a fluoridated children-toothpaste starting the very day of the appearance of the first milk tooth. 2. At the age of 12 months, the bottle should be replaced by a cup and the continuous use of a nursing bottle while falling asleep and during the night should absolutely be avoided. 3. Children should primarily be offered water and milk as a beverage. A first dental inspection is due at the age of two years.


Community Dentistry and Oral Epidemiology | 2015

Caries experience in 7-, 12-, and 15-year-old schoolchildren in the canton of Basel-Landschaft, Switzerland, from 1992 to 2011.

Tuomas Waltimo; Giorgio Menghini; Catherine Weber; Eva M. Kulik; Samuel Schild; Jürg Meyer

OBJECTIVES To investigate the changes in caries experience and prevalence among schoolchildren of the canton of Basel-Landschaft, Switzerland, over the course of 20 years. METHODS A random sample of either schoolchildren aged 7, 12, and 15 years (in 1992) or aged 12 and 15 years (in 1997) or their respective school classes (2001, 2006 and 2011) was selected so that approximately 10% of schoolchildren could be examined. The childrens dmft and DMFT scores were determined according to the WHO methodology and analyzed using cluster-adjusted ordinary multiple linear regression modeling. RESULTS For all age groups, the respective dmft/DMFT values decreased steadily from 1992 to 2006 but increased again in 2011. However, the observed differences were not statistically significant over the examination years from 2001 to 2011. Schoolchildren with a migrant background had approximately two- to threefold higher dmft/DMFT values. CONCLUSIONS In the years from 1992 to 2001, a steady decline in caries was observed in all age groups of schoolchildren examined in the canton of Basel-Landschaft. However, in the subsequent 10 years, this decline has leveled off. The mean dmft/DMFT values are comparable to those in other parts of Switzerland. Migrants are a caries-risk group; the mean dmft/DMFT values were higher in schoolchildren with a migrant background than in the comparable Swiss children.


Archive | 2014

Enhanced Fluoride in Groundwater in Eastern Anatolia: Effects, Origin and Possibilities for Remediation

Werner Balderer; Fanny Leuenberger; Giorgio Menghini; Walter Dierauer

In the spring of 2002 and summer of 2003 two research surveys were carried out in eastern Anatolia. The hydrogeological/hydrochemical investigations undertaken in the spring of 2002 revealed a dramatic situation of the water supply in several villages in the Dogubeyazit area, manifesting fluoride concentrations largely above the 1 ppm WHO limit of fluoride concentration in drinking water. The severity of the resulting health problems was confirmed by a dental and general health survey in three villages where the available water supply contained 6–8 ppm of fluoride. Consequently, this hydrogeological study will attempt to contribute to the alleviation of this problem by the following: (i) to survey the existing situation with regards to the current use of groundwater provided by the existing springs, and boreholes, (ii) to propose a new distribution network of groundwater resources with low fluoride concentration in order to lower its intake thus improving health and quality of life of the affected population.


American Journal of Dentistry | 2004

Effect of 1000 ppm relative to 250 ppm fluoride toothpaste. A meta-analysis.

Marcel Steiner; Ulrich Helfenstein; Giorgio Menghini


Community Dentistry and Oral Epidemiology | 2005

Use of the Significant Caries Index in quantifying the changes in caries in Switzerland from 1964 to 2000.

Thomas M. Marthaler; Giorgio Menghini; Marcel Steiner


Community Dental Health | 2008

Caries prevalence in 2-year-old children in the city of Zurich

Giorgio Menghini; Marcel Steiner; E Thomet; Malgorzata Roos; Thomas Imfeld


Schweizer Monatsschrift für Zahnmedizin = Revue mensuelle suisse d'odonto-stomatologie = Rivista mensile svizzera di odontologia e stomatologia / SSO | 2012

Dental visits, oral hygiene behaviour, and orthodontic treatment in Switzerland

Pascale Stadelmann; Elisabeth Zemp; Carine Weiss; Roland Weiger; Giorgio Menghini; Nicola U. Zitzmann


Community Dentistry and Oral Epidemiology | 1998

ASSOCIATION OF SALIVARY MUTANS STREPTOCOCCI WITH DISCOLOURED PITS AND FISSURES

Marcel Steiner; Ulrich Helfenstein; Giorgio Menghini


Community Dental Health | 2002

An example of complex modelling in dentistry using Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) simulation

Ulrich Helfenstein; Giorgio Menghini; Marcel Steiner; Francesca Murati

Collaboration


Dive into the Giorgio Menghini's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Elisabeth Zemp

Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge