Tsuboya Toru, Aida Jun, Kawachi Ichiro, Katase Kazuo, Osaka Ken
Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, USA.
Department of International and Community Oral Health, Tohoku University Graduate School of Dentistry, Sendai, Japan.
BMJ Open. 2014 Oct 3;4(10):e005701. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2014-005701.
We examined the association between socioeconomic position (SEP) and oral health, and the associations of economic difficulties in childhood and workplace-related factors on these parameters.
Cross-sectional study.
A total of 3201 workers aged 25-50 years, living in and around Tokyo, Japan, from the J-SHINE (Japanese study of Stratification, Health, Income, and Neighborhood) study. The response rate was 31.6%.
Self-rated oral health (SROH)-A logistic regression model was used to estimate ORs for the association between poor SROH and each indicator of SEP (annual household income, wealth, educational attainment, occupation and economic situation in childhood). Multiple imputation was used to address missing values.
Each indicator of SEP, including childhood SEP, was significantly inversely associated with SROH, and all of the workplace-related factors (social support in the workplace, job stress, working hours and type of employment) were also significantly associated with SROH. Compared with professionals, blue-collar workers had a significantly higher OR of poor SROH and the association was substantially explained by the workplace-related factors; ORs ranged from 1.44 in the age-adjusted and sex-adjusted model to 1.18 in the multivariate model. Poverty during childhood at age 5 and at age 15 was associated with poorer SROH, and these two factors seemed to be independently associated with SROH.
We found oral health disparity across SEP among workers in Japan. Approximately 60% of the association between occupation and SROH was explained by job-related factors. Economic difficulties during childhood appear to affect SROH in adulthood separately from sex, age and the current workplace-related factors.
我们研究了社会经济地位(SEP)与口腔健康之间的关联,以及童年时期的经济困难和与工作场所相关的因素对这些参数的影响。
横断面研究。
来自J-SHINE(日本分层、健康、收入和社区研究)研究的3201名年龄在25至50岁之间、居住在日本东京及其周边地区的工人。应答率为31.6%。
自评口腔健康(SROH)——使用逻辑回归模型估计SROH较差与SEP各指标(家庭年收入、财富、教育程度、职业和童年经济状况)之间关联的比值比(OR)。采用多重填补法处理缺失值。
SEP的各指标,包括童年SEP,均与SROH呈显著负相关,所有与工作场所相关的因素(工作场所的社会支持、工作压力、工作时长和就业类型)也与SROH显著相关。与专业人员相比,蓝领工人SROH较差的OR显著更高,且这种关联在很大程度上可由与工作场所相关的因素解释;OR在年龄和性别调整模型中为1.44,在多变量模型中为1.18。5岁和15岁时童年贫困与较差的SROH相关,这两个因素似乎与SROH独立相关。
我们发现日本工人中存在SEP相关的口腔健康差异。职业与SROH之间约60%的关联可由与工作相关的因素解释。童年时期的经济困难似乎独立于性别、年龄和当前与工作场所相关的因素影响成年后的SROH。