Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Mark D. Siegal is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Mark D. Siegal.


American Journal of Public Health | 2005

Parent or Caregiver, Staff, and Dentist Perspectives on Access to Dental Care Issues for Head Start Children in Ohio

Mark D. Siegal; Mary L. Marx; Shannon L. Cole

OBJECTIVES We conducted 5 surveys on consumer and provider perspectives on access to dental care for Ohio Head Start children to assess the need and appropriate strategies for action. METHODS We collected information from Head Start children (open-mouth screenings), their parents or caregivers (questionnaire and telephone interviews), Head Start staff (interviews), and dentists (questionnaire). Geocoded addresses were also analyzed. RESULTS Twenty-eight percent of Head Start children had at least 1 decayed tooth. For the 11% of parents whose children could not get desired dental care, cost of care or lack of insurance (34%) and dental office factors (20%) were primary factors. Only 7% of general dentists and 29% of pediatric dentists reported accepting children aged 0 through 5 years of age as Medicaid recipients without limitation. Head Start staff and dentists felt that poor appointment attendance negatively affected childrens receiving care, but parents/caregivers said finding accessible dentists was the major problem. CONCLUSIONS Many Ohio Head Start children do not receive dental care. Medicaid and patient age were primary dental office limitations that are partly offset by the role Head Start plays in ensuring dental care. Dentists, Head Start staff, and parents/caregivers have different perspectives on the problem of access to dental care.


Journal of the American Dental Association | 2016

Sealants for preventing and arresting pit-and-fissure occlusal caries in primary and permanent molars: A systematic review of randomized controlled trials—a report of the American Dental Association and the American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry

J.T. Wright; Malavika P. Tampi; Laurel Graham; Cameron Estrich; James J. Crall; Margherita Fontana; E. Jane Gillette; Brian B. Nový; Vineet Dhar; Kevin J. Donly; Edmond R. Hewlett; Rocio B. Quinonez; Jeffrey Chaffin; Matt Crespin; Timothy Iafolla; Mark D. Siegal; Alonso Carrasco-Labra

BACKGROUND National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey 2011-2012 data indicated that, in the United States, nearly one-fourth of children and over one-half of adolescents experienced dental caries in their permanent teeth. The purpose of this review was to summarize the available clinical evidence regarding the effect of dental sealants for the prevention and management of pit-and-fissure occlusal carious lesions in primary and permanent molars, compared with a control without sealants, with fluoride varnishes, or with other head-to head comparisons. TYPE OF STUDIES REVIEWED The authors included parallel and split-mouth randomized controlled trials that included at least 2 years of follow-up, which they identified using MEDLINE (via PubMed), Embase, LILACS, the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, and registers of ongoing trials. Pairs of reviewers independently conducted the selection of studies, data extraction, risk of bias assessments, and quality of the evidence assessments by using the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation approach. RESULTS Of 2,869 records screened, the authors determined that 24 articles (representing 23 studies) proved eligible. Moderate-quality evidence suggested that participants who received sealants had a reduced risk of developing carious lesions in occlusal surfaces of permanent molars compared with those who did not receive sealants (odds ratio [OR], 0.15; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.08-0.27) after 7 or more years of follow-up. When the authors compared studies whose investigators had compared sealants with fluoride varnishes, they found that sealants reduced the incidence of carious lesions after 7 or more years of follow-up (OR, 0.19; 95% CI, 0.07-0.51); however, this finding was supported by low-quality evidence. On the basis of the evidence, the authors could not provide a hierarchy of effectiveness among the studies whose investigators had conducted head-to-head comparisons. The investigators of 2 trials provided information about adverse events, but they did not report any adverse events. CONCLUSIONS AND PRACTICAL IMPLICATIONS Available evidence suggests that sealants are effective and safe to prevent or arrest the progression of noncavitated carious lesions compared with a control without sealants or fluoride varnishes. Further research is needed to provide information about the relative merits of the different types of sealant materials.


Journal of Public Health Dentistry | 2010

Do school-based dental sealant programs reach higher risk children?

Mark D. Siegal; Amber M. Richardson Detty

OBJECTIVES This report compares sealant prevalence by caries risk status among third graders at Ohio schools with and without school-based dental sealant programs (S-BSPs), and estimates the percent of children receiving sealants in S-BSPs who are higher risk for dental caries. METHODS We analyzed data from a statewide open-mouth oral health survey of Ohio third grade schoolchildren for sealant prevalence by S-BSP availability and caries risk classification. Children were classified as higher or lower risk for dental caries based on school lunch program enrollment and other non-clinical access-related indicators. Differences between groups were evaluated by the chi-square test (P < 0.05). RESULTS At schools with no S-BSPs, higher risk children were less likely to have dental sealants than lower risk children (28.7 percent versus 42.7 percent, P < 0.001). At schools with S-BSPs, sealant prevalence for both risk categories was equivalent for higher and lower risk children (59.4 percent, 63.4 percent, P = 0.428). Higher risk children at schools with S-BSPs were more than twice as likely to have a sealant as higher risk children at non-S-BSP schools (59.4 percent versus 28.7 percent, P < 0.001). Of higher risk children with at least one sealant, 61 percent attended a school with an S-BSP compared with 12.3 percent of lower risk children with at least one sealant. Higher risk children accounted for at least 75 percent of children receiving sealants through S-BSPs. CONCLUSIONS In Ohio, targeting S-BSPs by family income-based school-level criteria was effective in reaching higher risk children.


Journal of Public Health Dentistry | 2010

Targeting school-based dental sealant programs: who is at "higher risk?".

Mark D. Siegal; Amber M. Richardson Detty

OBJECTIVES To assess the effect of various school-level Free and Reduced Price Meal Program (FRPMP) enrollment-based risk thresholds on the ability of school-based sealant programs (S-BSPs) to reach higher risk children. METHODS We used data from a statewide third grade oral health survey to compare: a) prevalence of dental caries for higher-risk children, using three different sets of child risk criteria based on social determinants; and b) dental caries and other access-related indicators for children at higher-risk schools based on four FRPMP-based thresholds (> or = 60 percent of children FRPMP-enrolled, > or = 50 percent, > or = 40 percent, > or = 30 percent). In addition, we used school enrollment and FRPMP enrollment data to compare the percentages of eligible schools and of higher-risk children resulting from the various thresholds. RESULTS The prevalence of caries experiences and untreated caries were not significantly different for higher risk children categorized by the respective child caries risk criteria. Regardless of school-level risk threshold, children at higher risk schools were more likely to have caries experience, untreated caries, and no recent dental visit and less likely to have private dental insurance than children at lower risk schools. For these measures, children at higher risk schools were similar to each other regardless of risk threshold and were similar to higher risk children at all schools. The number of additional higher risk children per additional higher risk school showed a large decline between the 40-49 percent and 30-39 percent FRPMP enrollment tiers. CONCLUSIONS Targeting higher risk schools to reach higher risk children is a practical and effective approach for increasing sealant prevalence through S-BSPs.


Journal of the American Dental Association | 2016

Sealants for preventing and arresting pit-and-fissure occlusal caries in primary and permanent molars

J.T. Wright; Malavika P. Tampi; Laurel Graham; Cameron Estrich; James J. Crall; Margherita Fontana; E. Jane Gillette; Brian B. Nový; Vineet Dhar; Kevin J. Donly; Edmond R. Hewlett; Rocio B. Quinonez; Jeffrey Chaffin; Matt Crespin; Timothy Iafolla; Mark D. Siegal; Alonso Carrasco-Labra

BACKGROUND National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey 2011-2012 data indicated that, in the United States, nearly one-fourth of children and over one-half of adolescents experienced dental caries in their permanent teeth. The purpose of this review was to summarize the available clinical evidence regarding the effect of dental sealants for the prevention and management of pit-and-fissure occlusal carious lesions in primary and permanent molars, compared with a control without sealants, with fluoride varnishes, or with other head-to head comparisons. TYPE OF STUDIES REVIEWED The authors included parallel and split-mouth randomized controlled trials that included at least 2 years of follow-up, which they identified using MEDLINE (via PubMed), Embase, LILACS, the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, and registers of ongoing trials. Pairs of reviewers independently conducted the selection of studies, data extraction, risk of bias assessments, and quality of the evidence assessments by using the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation approach. RESULTS Of 2,869 records screened, the authors determined that 24 articles (representing 23 studies) proved eligible. Moderate-quality evidence suggested that participants who received sealants had a reduced risk of developing carious lesions in occlusal surfaces of permanent molars compared with those who did not receive sealants (odds ratio [OR], 0.15; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.08-0.27) after 7 or more years of follow-up. When the authors compared studies whose investigators had compared sealants with fluoride varnishes, they found that sealants reduced the incidence of carious lesions after 7 or more years of follow-up (OR, 0.19; 95% CI, 0.07-0.51); however, this finding was supported by low-quality evidence. On the basis of the evidence, the authors could not provide a hierarchy of effectiveness among the studies whose investigators had conducted head-to-head comparisons. The investigators of 2 trials provided information about adverse events, but they did not report any adverse events. CONCLUSIONS AND PRACTICAL IMPLICATIONS Available evidence suggests that sealants are effective and safe to prevent or arrest the progression of noncavitated carious lesions compared with a control without sealants or fluoride varnishes. Further research is needed to provide information about the relative merits of the different types of sealant materials.


Maternal and Child Health Journal | 2009

Validation of a Method for Collecting Annual, Population-based Oral Health Data for the MCH Title V Block Grant

Amber M. Richardson Detty; Mark D. Siegal

Objectives This study sought to determine whether estimates of oral health-related indicators generated using a relatively small purposive sample of schools were reasonable. Methods We collected and analyzed data from two open-mouth school oral health surveys conducted in Ohio in 2004–2005. In each survey, data were gathered for nine indicators using direct observation and a questionnaire. The first survey used unweighted data from 23 sentinel schools purposively selected to represent the state based on the findings of a large 1998–1999 oral health survey (337 schools). The second survey used weighted data aggregated from 374 schools randomly selected to represent each of Ohio’s 88 counties. The point estimates from the first data set were compared with 95% confidence intervals (CIs) from the second and Chi-square measures were estimated to determine statistically significant differences. Results For six of nine indicators, point estimates for the sentinel schools fell within the relatively narrow 95% CIs generated for the 374 schools sampled at the county level. Only one indicator (history of tooth decay) was found to be significantly different according to Chi-square analysis. Conclusions Ohio’s sentinel schools approach provided reasonable estimates suitable for annual reporting as required for the Title V Maternal and Child Health Block Grant. Data collected in this manner are likely to be reasonable population estimates and less costly than larger surveys.


Pediatric Dentistry | 2016

Sealants for Preventing and Arresting Pit-and-fissure Occlusal Caries in Primary and Permanent Molars. A systematic review of randomized controlled trials-a report of the American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry and the American Dental Association

J.T. Wright; Malavika P. Tampi; Laurel Graham; Cameron Estrich; James J. Crall; Margherita Fontana; E. Jane Gillette; Brian B. Novy; Vineet Dhar; Kevin J. Donly; Edmond R. Hewlett; Rocio B. Quinonez; Jeffrey Chaffin; Matt Crespin; Timothy Iafolla; Mark D. Siegal; Alonso Carrasco Labra

BACKGROUND National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey 2011-2012 data indicated that, in the United States, nearly one-fourth of children and over one-half of adolescents experienced dental caries in their permanent teeth. The purpose of this review was to summarize the available clinical evidence regarding the effect of dental sealants for the prevention and management of pit-and-fissure occlusal carious lesions in primary and permanent molars, compared with a control without sealants, with fluoride varnishes, or with other head-to head comparisons. TYPE OF STUDIES REVIEWED The authors included parallel and split-mouth randomized controlled trials that included at least 2 years of follow-up, which they identified using MEDLINE (via PubMed), Embase, LILACS, the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, and registers of ongoing trials. Pairs of reviewers independently conducted the selection of studies, data extraction, risk of bias assessments, and quality of the evidence assessments by using the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation approach. RESULTS Of 2,869 records screened, the authors determined that 24 articles (representing 23 studies) proved eligible. Moderate-quality evidence suggested that participants who received sealants had a reduced risk of developing carious lesions in occlusal surfaces of permanent molars compared with those who did not receive sealants (odds ratio [OR], 0.15; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.08-0.27) after 7 or more years of follow-up. When the authors compared studies whose investigators had compared sealants with fluoride varnishes, they found that sealants reduced the incidence of carious lesions after 7 or more years of follow-up (OR, 0.19; 95% CI, 0.07-0.51); however, this finding was supported by low-quality evidence. On the basis of the evidence, the authors could not provide a hierarchy of effectiveness among the studies whose investigators had conducted head-to-head comparisons. The investigators of 2 trials provided information about adverse events, but they did not report any adverse events. CONCLUSIONS AND PRACTICAL IMPLICATIONS Available evidence suggests that sealants are effective and safe to prevent or arrest the progression of noncavitated carious lesions compared with a control without sealants or fluoride varnishes. Further research is needed to provide information about the relative merits of the different types of sealant materials.


American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry | 2016

Sealants for preventing and arresting pit-and-fissure occlusal caries in primary and permanent molars A systematic review of randomized controlled trials-a report of the American Dental Association and the American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry

J.T. Wright; Malavika P. Tampi; Laurel Graham; Cameron Estrich; James J. Crall; Margherita Fontana; E. Jane Gillette; Brian B. Novy; Vineet Dhar; Kevin J. Donly; Edmond R. Hewlett; Rocio B. Quinonez; Jeffrey Chaffin; Matt Crespin; Timothy Iafolla; Mark D. Siegal; Raúl Alonso Carrasco Labra

BACKGROUND National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey 2011-2012 data indicated that, in the United States, nearly one-fourth of children and over one-half of adolescents experienced dental caries in their permanent teeth. The purpose of this review was to summarize the available clinical evidence regarding the effect of dental sealants for the prevention and management of pit-and-fissure occlusal carious lesions in primary and permanent molars, compared with a control without sealants, with fluoride varnishes, or with other head-to head comparisons. TYPE OF STUDIES REVIEWED The authors included parallel and split-mouth randomized controlled trials that included at least 2 years of follow-up, which they identified using MEDLINE (via PubMed), Embase, LILACS, the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, and registers of ongoing trials. Pairs of reviewers independently conducted the selection of studies, data extraction, risk of bias assessments, and quality of the evidence assessments by using the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation approach. RESULTS Of 2,869 records screened, the authors determined that 24 articles (representing 23 studies) proved eligible. Moderate-quality evidence suggested that participants who received sealants had a reduced risk of developing carious lesions in occlusal surfaces of permanent molars compared with those who did not receive sealants (odds ratio [OR], 0.15; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.08-0.27) after 7 or more years of follow-up. When the authors compared studies whose investigators had compared sealants with fluoride varnishes, they found that sealants reduced the incidence of carious lesions after 7 or more years of follow-up (OR, 0.19; 95% CI, 0.07-0.51); however, this finding was supported by low-quality evidence. On the basis of the evidence, the authors could not provide a hierarchy of effectiveness among the studies whose investigators had conducted head-to-head comparisons. The investigators of 2 trials provided information about adverse events, but they did not report any adverse events. CONCLUSIONS AND PRACTICAL IMPLICATIONS Available evidence suggests that sealants are effective and safe to prevent or arrest the progression of noncavitated carious lesions compared with a control without sealants or fluoride varnishes. Further research is needed to provide information about the relative merits of the different types of sealant materials.


Journal of the American Dental Association | 2008

Evidence-Based Clinical Recommendations for the Use of Pit-and-Fissure Sealants: A Report of the American Dental Association Council on Scientific Affairs

Jean Beauchamp; Page W. Caufield; James J. Crall; Kevin J. Donly; Robert J. Feigal; Barbara Gooch; Amid Ismail; William Kohn; Mark D. Siegal; Richard Simonsen


Journal of the American Dental Association | 2009

Preventing Dental Caries Through School-Based Sealant Programs: Updated Recommendations and Reviews of Evidence

Barbara F. Gooch; Susan O. Griffin; Shellie Kolavic Gray; William Kohn; R. Gary Rozier; Mark D. Siegal; Margherita Fontana; Diane Brunson; Nancy Carter; David K. Curtis; Kevin J. Donly; Harold Haering; Lawrence F. Hill; H. Pitts Hinson; Jayanth V. Kumar; Lewis Lampiris; Mark E. Mallatt; Daniel M. Meyer; Wanda R. Miller; Susan M. Sanzi-Schaedel; Simonsen Rj; Benedict I. Truman; Domenick T. Zero

Collaboration


Dive into the Mark D. Siegal's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kevin J. Donly

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

James J. Crall

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Cameron Estrich

American Dental Association

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

J.T. Wright

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Malavika P. Tampi

American Dental Association

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Matt Crespin

Children's Hospital of Wisconsin

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Rocio B. Quinonez

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge