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Assessing the Impact of a Social Media-Based Educational Intervention Using WhatsApp Video Messages on Dental Caries Prevention Knowledge, Oral Hygiene Practices, and Attitudes Toward Dental Health Among Primary School Children Aged 10-12 Years in Public Schools in Cairo Governorate, Egypt: A Quasi-

R

Rana Mohamed Ahmed Farghal

Status

Not yet enrolling

Conditions

Preventive Health Care
Dental Caries
Child Behavioral Health
Oral Hygiene, Oral Health
Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
Oral Health Behavior Change

Treatments

Behavioral: WhatsApp-Based Dental Health Education for Children

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT07363317
MMA-DENT-2026-001

Details and patient eligibility

About

The goal of this study is to learn if educational videos sent through WhatsApp can improve dental health knowledge, healthy habits, and attitudes in primary school children aged 10 to 12 years in Cairo, Egypt.

The main questions it aims to answer are:

  • Do children who receive dental health videos through WhatsApp have better knowledge about caring for their teeth after 8 weeks compared to children who do not receive the videos?
  • Do children who watch the videos brush their teeth more often and correctly, and make healthier food choices?
  • Do children who watch the videos feel more positive about taking care of their teeth and visiting the dentist?

Researchers will compare children in Grade 5 who receive 6 short dental health videos through WhatsApp (one video per week for 6 weeks) to children in Grade 6 who continue their normal school activities to see if the videos lead to better knowledge, healthy habits, and more positive attitudes about dental health.

Participants will:

  • Answer questions about their dental health knowledge, tooth brushing and eating habits, and feelings about dental care at the start of the study (takes about 15 to 20 minutes in a private room at school)
  • Children in Grade 5 will join a WhatsApp group and receive one short video (2 to 5 minutes) each week for 6 weeks about topics like why teeth are important, how to brush teeth correctly, which foods are goo

Full description

STUDY DESIGN AND RATIONALE

This is a quasi-experimental pre-post study with a non-equivalent control group. The study compares WhatsApp-delivered video-based educational intervention (intervention group) to standard school activities (control group) among primary school children aged 10-12 years in Cairo, Egypt.

Quasi-experimental design was chosen because randomization at the individual level was not feasible in the school setting. To minimize contamination between groups, children were assigned by grade level: all Grade 5 students form the intervention group, and all Grade 6 students form the control group. This approach reduces daily interaction between groups while maintaining comparable baseline characteristics.

The intervention is based on social cognitive theory, which emphasizes observational learning, self-efficacy, and behavioral modeling. Videos were selected to demonstrate proper techniques, provide positive role models, and build confidence in children's ability to practice good oral health behaviors.

INTERVENTION DESCRIPTION

Intervention Group (Grade 5, n=75):

Children will receive 6 educational videos about dental health via a closed WhatsApp group over 6 weeks (one video per week, posted every Monday at 4:00 PM).

Video Content and Delivery Schedule:

Week 1 - "Why Do We Need Teeth?" (3:58 minutes) Topics: Dental anatomy and tooth functions (chewing, speaking, smiling), consequences of tooth loss, importance of caring for baby teeth, introduction to tooth decay. Format: Animated educational video with Arabic voiceover.

Week 2 - "The Right Way to Brush Our Teeth" (4:17 minutes) Topics: Step-by-step brushing technique (circular motion), brushing all surfaces (outer, inner, chewing), tongue brushing, frequency (twice daily), duration (2 minutes), replacing toothbrush every 3 months. Format: Animated demonstration with catchy song and visual instructions.

Week 3 - "Foods That Harm Our Teeth" (3-4 minutes) Topics: How sugary foods and drinks feed bacteria to produce acid causing cavities, sticky foods, frequent snacking, identifying unhealthy foods (candy, soda, cookies), limiting sugar intake. Format: Interactive animated video with visual categorization.

Week 4 - "Foods Good for Our Teeth" (3-4 minutes) Topics: Calcium-rich foods (milk, cheese, yogurt) strengthen teeth, crunchy fruits and vegetables naturally clean teeth, water rinses the mouth, importance of balanced diet for oral health. Format: Animated educational video.

Week 5 - "Why Do We Go to the Dentist?" (2-4 minutes) Topics: What happens during a dental checkup (examination, cleaning), professional cleaning removes plaque, importance of preventive care, recommended visit frequency (every 6 months), making dental visits fun instead of scary. Format: Animated story or live-action video showing positive dental visit experience.

Week 6 - "Fun Tips for Healthy Teeth" (2-3 minutes) Topics: Review of key messages, creative ways to make brushing fun (brushing to a song for 2 minutes, family brushing time, friendly competitions), establishing morning and evening routines, celebrating healthy smiles, positive reinforcement and encouragement. Format: Musical video with children singing and performing.

All videos were selected based on: high-quality production (clear audio/video), evidence-based content (aligned with WHO and American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry guidelines), age-appropriateness (10-12 years), cultural relevance (Arabic language, Egyptian context), engaging format (animation, demonstration, music), appropriate length (2-5 minutes), positive tone (encouraging, not fear-based), no commercial content, educational value, and positive viewer feedback.

WhatsApp Group Management:

A closed WhatsApp group named "Healthy Teeth Friends" will include 75 intervention group children and approximately 45 parents (60%) who optionally choose to join, with the researcher as group administrator.

Each weekly post includes: friendly greeting in Arabic, 2-3 sentence introduction about the week's topic, YouTube video link, encouraging message, and relevant emoji. Mid-week reminders will be sent to children who have not viewed the video within 48 hours. The researcher will monitor the group daily, respond to questions within 24 hours, and document intervention fidelity including date/time of posting, number of views within 48 hours, number of questions and reactions, and responses provided.

Control Group (Grade 6, n=75):

Children will continue their usual school and home activities without receiving study-related educational materials during the 8-week study period. They will be informed that a second assessment will occur in May. After completing post-intervention assessments, the control group will be invited to a separate WhatsApp group to receive all 6 educational videos for ethical reciprocity.

OUTCOME MEASURES

Primary Outcome:

Dental Health Knowledge

Enrollment

150 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

10 to 12 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Children aged 10 to 12 years (Grades 5 or 6)
  • Enrolled in the selected public primary school in Cairo, Egypt
  • Able to understand and speak Arabic
  • Parent or legal guardian provides written informed consent
  • Child provides verbal assent to participate
  • Child or parent has access to a smartphone with WhatsApp (for intervention group only)
  • Child or parent willing to join WhatsApp group and view educational videos (for intervention group only)
  • Able to complete questionnaire interview in Arabic

Exclusion criteria

  • Children with severe cognitive or developmental disabilities that would prevent understanding questionnaire items or educational content
  • Children with serious chronic medical conditions requiring intensive medical care that would interfere with study participation
  • Children who are unable to attend school regularly (more than 2 days absence per week on average)
  • Children who plan to transfer to another school during the study period (8 weeks)
  • Children whose parents refuse consent or who refuse to provide assent
  • Children currently participating in another dental health education program or clinical trial
  • For intervention group: children or parents without smartphone access or unwilling to use WhatsApp

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Non-Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

150 participants in 2 patient groups

Intervention Group
Experimental group
Description:
Grade 5 students (n=75) who receive six educational videos about dental health delivered via WhatsApp over 6 weeks (one video per week, posted every Monday at 4:00 PM). Videos are 2-5 minutes long and cover: Week 1 - Why teeth are important, Week 2 - Proper brushing technique, Week 3 - Foods that harm teeth, Week 4 - Foods good for teeth, Week 5 - Importance of dental visits, Week 6 - Fun tips for healthy smiles. All videos are in Arabic with colorful animations appropriate for children aged 10-12 years. Children are assessed at baseline (Week 0) and post-intervention (Week 8).
Treatment:
Behavioral: WhatsApp-Based Dental Health Education for Children
Control Group
No Intervention group
Description:
Grade 6 students (n=75) who continue their usual school curriculum and home activities without receiving study-related educational materials during the 8-week study period. Children are assessed at baseline (Week 0) and at Week 8 using the same questionnaires as the intervention group. After completing post-intervention assessments, this group will be invited to join a separate WhatsApp group to receive all six educational videos for ethical reciprocity.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Passant Nagi, PhD; Rana M Farghal, B.D.S.

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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