Published 10 years ago
Last updated 10 years ago

- On average people in the North Africa and Middle East have 1.9 decayed, missing or filled teeth each, rising to 4.6 in some countries
- More than 90% of 6-12 year-olds in some Arab countries suffer from untreated tooth decay
- Tooth decay is one of most common but treatable chronic diseases in the world
Dubai, UAE17thFebruary, 2015: Joining together today in the UAE, North Africa and Middle East (NAME) leaders in dentistry and public health launched a regional campaign to stop cavities, the Alliance for a Cavity-Free Future (the Alliance). TheNAMEAlliance calls for national collaborative action to challenge leaders and stakeholders in the community to learn the importance of tooth decay by recognising that cavities are preventable and in the early stages reversible, and to develop comprehensive programmes for prevention and management across the region.

- By 2015, 90 percent of dental schools and dental associations should have embraced and promoted the “new” approach of “caries as a continuum” to improve dental caries prevention and management.
- By 2020, regional members of the Alliance for a Cavity-Free Future should have integrated, locally appropriate, comprehensive caries prevention and management systems and monitoring developed and in place.
- Every child born in 2026 should stay cavity free during their life time.
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