Plain-English translation of NCT05758454 on ClinicalTrials.gov ↗ · Source last updated · Translation generated ·
This study doesn't follow the usual testing phases — it may be an observational study or a different type of research.
This study is testing whether providing oral health and nutrition education that is tailored to immigrant parents' cultures and life situations can help prevent tooth decay and obesity in young children. Researchers will teach some parents about healthy eating and dental care practices during their child's first 18–24 months of life, then follow both the taught families and a comparison group to see how children's teeth and overall health develop over time.
Immigrant families may face barriers to understanding standard health advice about children's oral health and nutrition. This trial exists to test whether education programs designed specifically for immigrant parents—in their own languages and adapted to their needs—can help prevent cavities and unhealthy weight gain in young children.
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If you are selected for the intervention group, you will receive oral health and nutrition information translated into your native language. Researchers will then follow you and your child from when your child is a newborn through ages 3–5 years, checking on changes in your knowledge and attitudes about oral health, your child's eating habits, and your child's dental and overall health. If you are in the comparison group, you will complete standard care while researchers track similar information.
AI-generated summary from trial data · Jun 2, 2026 · Not medical advice
Norway