Koivusilta L, Honkala S, Honkala E, Rimpelä A
Department of Social Policy, FIN-20014 University of Turku, Finland.
J Dent Res. 2003 May;82(5):361-6. doi: 10.1177/154405910308200507.
Socio-economic differences in health and health behavior are well-known. Our hypothesis was that toothbrushing frequency in adolescents predicts their education level in adulthood. The aim was also to study the role of toothbrushing in adolescents' health-related lifestyle. Data from nationally representative samples of 12- to 16-year-olds (N = 11,149) were linked with register data on the highest level of education attained at age 27-33 years. Adolescents with a low toothbrushing frequency reached only the lowest education levels. School achievement or sociodemographic background only partly accounted for the association. Exploratory factor analysis found four dimensions of health behaviors. At age 12, a low toothbrushing frequency was loaded highly with "street-oriented" behaviors, concentrated around smoking and alcohol use. At ages 14 and 16, it was associated with a "traditional" lifestyle of the less-well-educated. Altogether, a low toothbrushing frequency indicated selection into the less-well-educated stratum of society. This is likely to be reflected in socio-economic health differences in adulthood.
健康及健康行为方面的社会经济差异是众所周知的。我们的假设是,青少年的刷牙频率能够预测其成年后的教育水平。研究目的还包括探讨刷牙在青少年与健康相关生活方式中的作用。来自具有全国代表性的12至16岁样本(N = 11,149)的数据与27至33岁时所达到的最高教育水平的登记数据相关联。刷牙频率低的青少年仅达到最低教育水平。学业成绩或社会人口背景只能部分解释这种关联。探索性因素分析发现了健康行为的四个维度。在12岁时,刷牙频率低与“街头导向”行为高度相关,这些行为集中在吸烟和饮酒方面。在14岁和16岁时,它与受教育程度较低者的“传统”生活方式相关。总体而言,刷牙频率低表明进入了社会中受教育程度较低的阶层。这很可能反映在成年后的社会经济健康差异中。