Institute of Health & Society, Newcastle University, The Baddiley-Clark Building, Richardson Road, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK.
Institute of Epidemiology and Health Care, UCL, London, UK.
J Public Health (Oxf). 2018 Dec 1;40(4):e423-e430. doi: 10.1093/pubmed/fdy068.
The influence of life-course socioeconomic disadvantage on oral health at older ages is not well-established. We examined the influence of socioeconomic factors in childhood, middle-age and older age on oral health at older ages, and tested conceptual life-course models (sensitive period, accumulation of risk, social mobility) to determine which best described observed associations.
A representative cohort of British men aged 71-92 in 2010-12 included socioeconomic factors in childhood, middle-age and older age. Oral health assessment at 71-92 years (n = 1622) included tooth count, periodontal disease and self-rated oral health (excellent/good, fair/poor) (n = 2147). Life-course models (adjusted for age and town of residence) were compared with a saturated model using Likelihood-ratio tests.
Socioeconomic disadvantage in childhood, middle-age and older age was associated with complete tooth loss at 71-92 years-age and town adjusted odds ratios (95% CI) were 1.39 (1.02-1.90), 2.26 (1.70-3.01), 1.83 (1.35-2.49), respectively. Socioeconomic disadvantage in childhood and middle-age was associated with poor self-rated oral health; adjusted odds ratios (95% CI) were 1.48 (1.19-1.85) and 1.45 (1.18-1.78), respectively. A sensitive period for socioeconomic disadvantage in middle-age provided the best model fit for tooth loss, while accumulation of risk model was the strongest for poor self-rated oral health. None of the life-course models were significant for periodontal disease measures.
Socioeconomic disadvantage in middle-age has a particularly strong influence on tooth loss in older age. Poor self-rated oral health in older age is influenced by socioeconomic disadvantage across the life-course. Addressing socioeconomic factors in middle and older ages are likely to be important for better oral health in later life.
生命历程中社会经济劣势对老年人口腔健康的影响尚未得到充分证实。我们研究了儿童期、中年和老年期的社会经济因素对老年人口腔健康的影响,并测试了概念性的生命历程模型(敏感期、风险积累、社会流动),以确定哪种模型最能描述观察到的关联。
2010-12 年,一个由 71-92 岁的英国男性组成的代表性队列纳入了儿童期、中年和老年期的社会经济因素。71-92 岁的口腔健康评估(n=1622)包括牙齿数量、牙周病和自我报告的口腔健康(优秀/良好、一般/较差)(n=2147)。使用似然比检验比较了生命历程模型(调整年龄和居住城镇)与饱和模型。
儿童期、中年和老年期的社会经济劣势与 71-92 岁时的完全失牙有关——调整后的年龄和城镇的优势比(95%置信区间)分别为 1.39(1.02-1.90)、2.26(1.70-3.01)、1.83(1.35-2.49)。儿童期和中年期的社会经济劣势与自我报告的口腔健康较差有关;调整后的优势比(95%置信区间)分别为 1.48(1.19-1.85)和 1.45(1.18-1.78)。中年时期社会经济劣势的敏感时期为失牙提供了最佳模型拟合,而风险积累模型则对自我报告的口腔健康较差的影响最强。生命历程模型对牙周病测量均无显著影响。
中年时期的社会经济劣势对老年人口腔健康的影响尤为显著。老年人口腔健康较差受到生命历程中社会经济劣势的影响。解决中年和老年时期的社会经济因素对于改善晚年的口腔健康可能非常重要。