dc.description.abstract | Dental caries is a multifactorial condition affected by behavioral factors. Parenting styles reflect different behavior
influenced by cultural and socioeconomic backgrounds. Coastal areas have unique cultural and socioeconomic
conditions and underlie the community's upbringing behavior. This study aims to determine the differences in
preschool children's caries experience based on parenting patterns in a coastal area. This research is a crosssectional study on children and their parents in the coastal area of Puger, Jember, East Java, Indonesia. The
participants were 269 pairs of preschool children and parents selected by random cluster sampling. The dependent
variable was dental caries experience measured using the def-t index. The independent variable was the type of
parenting categorized into three groups (authoritative, authoritarian, permissive) based on a questionnaire
distributed to parents. The Kruskal-Wallis test was applied to determine the difference in caries rates in each
parenting style (p≤ 0.05). The results showed that the prevalence of primary teeth caries was 97%, and the mean
of def-t was 10.03. Authoritative parenting style was the majority (81.8%), and no statistically significant
difference was found between caries and parenting style (p=0.473). However, the mean of def-t in the authoritarian
group was higher than in others (10.42). Based on the result, it can be concluded that the mean of dental caries
among children in a coastal area with authoritarian parents was the highest compared to others, but the difference
was statistically insignificant. | en_US |