Quandt Sara A, Chen Haiying, Bell Ronny A, Anderson Andrea M, Savoca Margaret R, Kohrman Teresa, Gilbert Gregg H, Arcury Thomas A
Division of Public Health Sciences, Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, North Carolina 27157, USA.
J Am Geriatr Soc. 2009 Aug;57(8):1369-75. doi: 10.1111/j.1532-5415.2009.02367.x. Epub 2009 Jun 25.
To compare oral health status according to ethnicity and socioeconomic status in African-American, American-Indian, and white dentate and edentulous community-dwelling older adults.
Cross-sectional study; data from self-reports and oral examinations.
A multistage cluster sampling design was used to recruit 635 participants aged 60 and older from rural North Carolina counties with substantial African-American and American-Indian populations.
Participants completed in-home interviews and oral examinations. Self-reported data included sociodemographic indicators; self-rated oral health status; presence or absence of periodontal disease, bleeding gums, oral pain, dry mouth; and fit of prostheses. Oral examination data included number of teeth and numbers of anterior and posterior functional occlusal units.
African Americans and American Indians had significantly lower incomes and educational attainment than whites. Self-rated oral health was significantly better in whites than in African Americans and American Indians. Prevalence of self-reported periodontal disease and bleeding gums was lower in whites. Of dentate participants, African Americans were significantly more likely than whites to have 11 to 20 teeth and one or two posterior occlusal contacts. Oral health deficits remained associated with ethnicity when adjusted for socioeconomic variables.
Oral health disparities in older adults in a multiethnic rural area were largely associated with ethnicity and not socioeconomic status. Clinicians should be aware of these health disparities in oral health status and their possible role in disparities in chronic disease. Further research is necessary to understand whether these oral health disparities reflect current or lifetime access to care, diet, or attitudes toward oral health care.
比较非裔美国人、美洲印第安人和白人有牙及无牙的社区居住老年人按种族和社会经济地位划分的口腔健康状况。
横断面研究;来自自我报告和口腔检查的数据。
采用多阶段整群抽样设计,从北卡罗来纳州农村有大量非裔美国人和美洲印第安人的县招募了635名60岁及以上的参与者。
参与者完成了家庭访谈和口腔检查。自我报告的数据包括社会人口统计学指标;自我评估的口腔健康状况;是否存在牙周病、牙龈出血、口腔疼痛、口干;以及假牙的贴合度。口腔检查数据包括牙齿数量以及前牙和后牙功能性咬合单位的数量。
非裔美国人和美洲印第安人的收入和教育程度明显低于白人。白人自我评估的口腔健康状况明显优于非裔美国人和美洲印第安人。自我报告的牙周病和牙龈出血的患病率在白人中较低。在有牙的参与者中,非裔美国人比白人更有可能有11至20颗牙齿以及一或两个后牙咬合接触。在对社会经济变量进行调整后,口腔健康缺陷仍然与种族有关。
一个多民族农村地区老年人的口腔健康差异在很大程度上与种族有关,而非社会经济地位。临床医生应意识到这些口腔健康状况的差异及其在慢性病差异中可能发挥的作用。有必要进一步研究以了解这些口腔健康差异是否反映了当前或一生获得护理、饮食或对口腔保健态度的情况。