Do Loc Giang, Ha Diep Hong, Spencer A John
Australian Research Centre for Population Oral Health, The University of Adelaide, Adelaide, SA, Australia.
Community Dent Oral Epidemiol. 2015 Oct;43(5):397-405. doi: 10.1111/cdoe.12162. Epub 2015 Apr 21.
Dental caries is a multifactorial condition, prevention of which requires comprehensive understanding of both contextual and compositional determinants and their population impact.
To investigate contextual and compositional factors associated with the prevalence of dental caries in children and to estimate the population impact of those factors.
Children in one Australian state were selected through stratified random sampling selection in 2010-2011. Oral epidemiological examinations provided individual-level outcomes: prevalence of dental caries in the primary (among 5- to 8-year-olds) and permanent dentitions (9- to 14-year-olds). Socioeconomic status, oral health behaviours and practices and dietary patterns were explanatory factors at the individual-level, school-level and area-level fluoridation status. Three-level multilevel multivariable models were sequentially specified for the prevalence of dental caries to estimate prevalence ratios (PR) associated with explanatory factors, adjusting for covariates and between- and within-group variances. Population attributable fraction (PAF) was estimated as the population impact of the statistically significant explanatory factors.
Data from 2214 5- to 8-year-olds and 3186 9- to 14-year-olds from 207 schools in 16 areas were analysed. The prevalence of dental caries in the primary and the permanent dentitions was 47.1% (43.9-50.4) and 38.8% (36.1-41.6), respectively. The highest prevalence of dental caries was observed in the nonfluoridated areas. In bivariate associations, factors at three levels were associated with prevalence of dental caries. In the full models, children in the nonfluoridated areas had significantly higher prevalence of dental caries [PR for the primary: 1.29 (1.11-1.50); PR for the permanent 1.49 (1.01-2.21)] compared with children in fluoridated areas, controlling for other factors. PAF estimates indicated that lack of water fluoridation attributed to 21% and 31% of primary and permanent dental caries, respectively in this child population.
A multitude of factors had significant population impact on the prevalence of dental caries in children. Water fluoridation has a significant population impact on dental caries experience in this child population.
龋齿是一种多因素导致的疾病,预防龋齿需要全面了解背景因素和构成因素及其对人群的影响。
调查与儿童龋齿患病率相关的背景因素和构成因素,并评估这些因素对人群的影响。
2010 - 2011年通过分层随机抽样选取澳大利亚一个州的儿童。口腔流行病学检查提供个体层面的结果:乳牙列(5至8岁儿童)和恒牙列(9至14岁儿童)的龋齿患病率。社会经济地位、口腔健康行为和习惯以及饮食模式是个体层面、学校层面和地区层面的氟化状态的解释因素。针对龋齿患病率依次指定三级多水平多变量模型,以估计与解释因素相关的患病率比(PR),并对协变量以及组间和组内方差进行调整。估计人群归因分数(PAF)作为具有统计学意义的解释因素对人群的影响。
分析了来自16个地区207所学校的2214名5至8岁儿童和3186名9至14岁儿童的数据。乳牙列和恒牙列的龋齿患病率分别为47.1%(43.9 - 50.4)和38.8%(36.1 - 41.6)。在未氟化地区观察到最高的龋齿患病率。在双变量关联中,三个层面的因素都与龋齿患病率相关。在完整模型中,与氟化地区的儿童相比,未氟化地区的儿童龋齿患病率显著更高[乳牙列的PR:1.29(1.11 - 1.50);恒牙列的PR:1.49(1.01 - 2.21)](在控制其他因素的情况下)。PAF估计表明,在该儿童人群中,缺乏水氟化分别导致21%和31%的乳牙和恒牙龋齿。
多种因素对儿童龋齿患病率有显著的人群影响。水氟化对该儿童人群的龋齿患病情况有显著的人群影响。