Department of Oral Sciences, Sir John Walsh Research Institute, School of Dentistry, The University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand.
Community Dent Oral Epidemiol. 2012 Oct;40 Suppl 2:28-32. doi: 10.1111/j.1600-0528.2012.00716.x.
Social inequalities in oral health are observable regardless of the population, the culture, the method of social classification or the measure of oral health or disease. They exist because of socially determined differences in opportunity, behaviours, beliefs and exposure to the myriad factors which determine our oral health. Behaviours and practices which affect oral health are embedded in the normal patterns of everyday life; those (in turn) are socially determined and differ across the continuum of social status. This presentation focuses primarily on social inequalities in incremental tooth loss because (i) it is a condition which has been shown to have the greatest effect on people's oral-health-related quality of life, and (ii) it is cumulative and irreversible. Most of the knowledge base on social inequalities in tooth loss comes from cross-sectional studies; investigating the phenomenon in a birth cohort can be more informative because it allows us to determine what happens to those inequalities through the life course. Data on incremental tooth loss from a longstanding cohort study (the Dunedin Multidisciplinary Health and Development Study) are presented to illustrate the cumulative and pervasive effect of social inequalities and changes in social status between childhood and adulthood.
无论人口、文化、社会分类方法或口腔健康或疾病的衡量标准如何,都可以观察到口腔健康方面的社会不平等现象。这些不平等现象是由于机会、行为、信念以及受到众多决定我们口腔健康的因素的影响而产生的,这些因素是由社会决定的,并且在社会地位的连续体上存在差异。本演讲主要关注渐进性牙齿丧失方面的社会不平等现象,因为 (i) 它是一种已被证明对人们的口腔健康相关生活质量有最大影响的状况,并且 (ii) 它是累积且不可逆转的。大多数关于牙齿丧失方面社会不平等的知识基础来自于横断面研究;在出生队列中研究这一现象可能更具信息性,因为它可以让我们确定这些不平等现象在整个生命过程中的变化情况。来自一项长期队列研究(达尼丁多学科健康与发展研究)的渐进性牙齿丧失数据被呈现出来,以说明社会不平等现象以及童年和成年之间社会地位变化的累积和普遍影响。