美国人群口腔疾病的趋势
Trends in Oral Diseases in the U.S. Population.
作者信息
Rozier R Gary, White B Alexander, Slade Gary D
机构信息
Dr. Rozier is with the Department of Health Policy and Management, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Dr. White is with the Department of Health Policy and Management, Gillings School of Global Public Health, and Department of Dental Ecology, School of Dentistry, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; and Dr. Slade is with the Department of Dental Ecology, School of Dentistry, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
出版信息
J Dent Educ. 2017 Aug;81(8):eS97-eS109. doi: 10.21815/JDE.017.016.
This article reviews trends in dental caries, periodontal disease, and tooth loss for the United States along with population dynamics and risk factors that might influence these trends going forward. Dental caries experience remains high in the primary dentition. Caries severity in permanent teeth of children has declined to historically low levels, and long-standing inequalities in untreated caries appear to be narrowing. Declines in caries severity of children's permanent teeth have stabilized at a low level, but likely will contribute to future reductions in dental caries severity in adults. The prevalence of periodontal disease is high in adults, and only a small percentage have severe forms of the disease. Countervailing trends in determinants would suggest little change in the prevalence of periodontal disease in the future, but the lack of an obvious trend over the last two decades makes projections uncertain. Tooth loss as a consequence of dental disease has declined markedly over the last half century and has been all but eliminated in high-income groups. However, notable exceptions to these favorable trends are evident. Progress in prevention policies and programs that affect disease experience appears slower than progress in meeting population-level caries treatment needs. Clearly, long-standing inequities related to political and social determinants remain for all dental diseases, and income disparities in dental disease are widening for some indicators. Growing inequalities raise ethical and public health concerns that should be prominent in discussions of dental workforce needs and strategies for the next 25 years. This article was written as part of the project "Advancing Dental Education in the 21 Century."
本文回顾了美国龋齿、牙周疾病和牙齿缺失的发展趋势,以及可能影响未来这些趋势的人口动态和风险因素。乳牙列的龋齿患病率仍然很高。儿童恒牙的龋齿严重程度已降至历史最低水平,未经治疗的龋齿方面长期存在的不平等现象似乎正在缩小。儿童恒牙龋齿严重程度的下降已稳定在较低水平,但可能会促使未来成年人龋齿严重程度的降低。成年人牙周疾病的患病率很高,只有一小部分人患有严重形式的该疾病。决定因素的相反趋势表明,未来牙周疾病的患病率变化不大,但过去二十年缺乏明显趋势使得预测具有不确定性。过去半个世纪以来,因牙病导致的牙齿缺失显著减少,在高收入群体中几乎已被消除。然而,这些有利趋势也有明显的例外情况。影响疾病患病情况的预防政策和项目的进展似乎比满足人群层面龋齿治疗需求的进展要慢。显然,所有牙病在政治和社会决定因素方面长期存在的不平等现象依然存在,而且某些指标显示牙病方面的收入差距正在扩大。日益加剧的不平等引发了伦理和公共卫生方面的担忧,在讨论未来25年的牙科劳动力需求和策略时,这些担忧应成为重点。本文是“推进21世纪牙科教育”项目的一部分。