Institute of Health and Society, Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK.
Quality and Safety of Oral Care, Radboud University, Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
Eur J Health Econ. 2018 Jan;19(1):45-57. doi: 10.1007/s10198-016-0866-2. Epub 2017 Jan 7.
Oral disease, despite being largely preventable, remains the most common chronic disease worldwide and has a significant negative impact on quality of life, particularly among older adults.
This study is the first to comprehensively and at a large scale (14 European countries) measure the social inequalities in the number of natural teeth (an informative oral health marker) in the over 50-year-old population and to investigate the extent to which such inequalities are attributable to dental service use.
Using Wave 5 of the Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe, which included internationally harmonized information on over 50,000 individuals across 14 European countries, we calculated Gini and Concentration indices (CI) as well as the decompositions of CIs by socioeconomic factors.
Sweden consistently performed the best with the lowest inequalities as measured by Gini (0.1078), CI by income (0.0392), CI by education (0.0407), and CI by wealth (0.0296). No country performed the worst in all inequality measures. However, unexpectedly, some wealthier countries (e.g., the Netherlands and Denmark) had higher degrees of inequalities than less-wealthy countries (e.g., Estonia and Slovenia). Decomposition analysis showed that income, education, and wealth contributed substantially to the inequalities, and dental service use was an important contributor even after controlling for income and wealth.
The study highlighted the importance of comprehensively investigating oral health inequalities. The results are informative to policymakers to derive country-specific health policy recommendations to reduce oral health inequalities in the older population and also have implications for oral health improvement of the future generations.
尽管口腔疾病在很大程度上是可以预防的,但它仍是全球最常见的慢性病之一,对生活质量,尤其是对老年人的生活质量有着重大的负面影响。
本研究首次在欧洲 14 个国家大规模(14 个欧洲国家)全面衡量了 50 岁以上人群中天然牙齿数量(口腔健康的一个信息指标)的社会不平等现象,并调查了这些不平等现象在多大程度上归因于牙科服务的使用。
我们使用了欧洲健康、老龄化和退休调查的第 5 波数据,该调查包括了来自 14 个欧洲国家的超过 5 万名个体的国际协调信息,我们计算了基尼系数和集中指数(CI),以及按社会经济因素分解的 CI。
瑞典的表现始终最好,基尼系数(0.1078)、按收入(0.0392)、按教育(0.0407)和按财富(0.0296)衡量的 CI 不平等程度最低。没有一个国家在所有不平等衡量指标中表现最差。然而,出乎意料的是,一些较富裕的国家(如荷兰和丹麦)的不平等程度比较贫穷的国家(如爱沙尼亚和斯洛文尼亚)更高。分解分析表明,收入、教育和财富对不平等现象有很大贡献,即使在控制了收入和财富之后,牙科服务的使用也是一个重要的贡献因素。
本研究强调了全面调查口腔健康不平等现象的重要性。研究结果为决策者提供了有价值的信息,以便制定针对特定国家的卫生政策建议,以减少老年人群中的口腔健康不平等现象,同时也对未来几代人的口腔健康改善具有启示意义。