Indonesian Journal of Dental Medicine
Vol. 9 No. 1 (2026): Indonesian Journal of Dental Medicine

The relationship between knowledge, attitude, and practice towards snacking habits with dental caries status among children aged 8–11 years at Ketabang 1 Public Elementary School, Surabaya

Setyowati, Dini (Unknown)
Putri, Nabila Adine (Unknown)
Erinda, Intan Aprillia Putri (Unknown)
Maharani, Annisa Tri (Unknown)
Supatra, Andre Amin (Unknown)
Sa’adah, Nur Hikmatus  (Unknown)
Aprilia, Amanda Ayu (Unknown)
Saputra , Jasmine Dharmarani (Unknown)
Aifma, Sella Pujaya Wahyu (Unknown)
Suryanti, Fanya (Unknown)
Noor, Tengku Natasha Eleena binti Tengku Ahmad (Unknown)



Article Info

Publish Date
12 Mar 2026

Abstract

Background: Dental caries is a chronic infectious disease caused by bacterial activity that demineralizes tooth enamel and dentin. According to the 2018 Indonesian Basic Health Research (Riskesdas), 67.3% of school-aged children experience oral health problems, with dental caries being the most prevalent (88.8%). Purpose: This study aimed to analyze the relationship between knowledge, attitude, and practice towards snacking behavior with dental caries status among children aged 8–11 years at Ketabang 1 Public Elementary School, Surabaya, in 2025. Methods: This observational analytic study used a cross-sectional design involving 85 students selected through cluster random sampling. Data on knowledge, attitude, and snacking behavior were collected using a structured questionnaire, while dental caries status was clinically examined using the DMFT and PUFA indices. Statistical analyses included the Chi-square test, Independent T-test, and Mann–Whitney test with a significance level of p < 0.05. Results: The mean DMFT scores ranged from 2.53 ± 1.37 to 4.65 ± 2.12, and the mean PUFA ranged from 0.20 ± 0.37 to 0.58 ± 0.67, indicating moderate to high caries prevalence. Chi-square analysis showed a significant relationship between knowledge (p = 0.000) and practice (p = 0.003) with dental caries status, while attitude showed no significant correlation (p = 0.943. Conclusion: Knowledge and snacking behavior are significantly associated with dental caries status among school-aged children, whereas attitude shows no significant relationship. Strengthening oral health education and promoting healthy snacking habits are crucial to reducing caries incidence in elementary school children.

Copyrights © 2026






Journal Info

Abbrev

IJDM

Publisher

Subject

Dentistry

Description

Indonesian Journal of Dental Medicine accepts original manuscripts in the many fields of dentistry, including research reports and literature reviews. The spread of fields include: Oral epidemiology, Oral health services research, Preventive dentistry, Oral health education and promotion, Clinical ...