Northridge Mary E, Chakraborty Bibhas, Salehabadi Sedigheh Mirzaei, Metcalf Sara S, Kunzel Carol, Greenblatt Ariel P, Borrell Luisa N, Cheng Bin, Marshall Stephen E, Lamster Ira B
J Health Care Poor Underserved. 2018;29(4):1509-1528. doi: 10.1353/hpu.2018.0109.
Understanding the relationships among diabetes, teeth present, and dental insurance is essential to improving primary and oral health care. Participants were older adults who attended senior centers in northern Manhattan (New York, N.Y.). Sociodemographic, health, and health care information were obtained via intake interviews, number of teeth present via clinical dental examinations, and glycemic status via measurement of glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c). Complete data on dental insurance coverage status for 785 participants were available for analysis (1,015 after multiple imputation). For participants with no dental insurance and any private/other dental insurance, number of teeth present is less for participants with diabetes than for participants without diabetes; however, for participants with Medicaid coverage only, the relationship is reversed. Potential explanations include the limited range of dental services covered under the Medicaid program, inadequate diabetes screening and monitoring of Medicaid recipients, and the poor oral and general health of Medicaid recipients.
了解糖尿病、现存牙齿数量和牙科保险之间的关系对于改善初级和口腔卫生保健至关重要。研究参与者为在曼哈顿北部(纽约州纽约市)老年中心就诊的老年人。通过入组访谈获取社会人口统计学、健康和医疗保健信息,通过临床牙科检查确定现存牙齿数量,通过测量糖化血红蛋白(HbA1c)确定血糖状态。785名参与者的牙科保险覆盖状况完整数据可供分析(多次插补后为1015名)。对于没有牙科保险和有任何私人/其他牙科保险的参与者,患有糖尿病的参与者的现存牙齿数量少于没有糖尿病的参与者;然而,对于仅享有医疗补助的参与者,这种关系则相反。潜在的解释包括医疗补助计划涵盖的牙科服务范围有限、对医疗补助受益人的糖尿病筛查和监测不足,以及医疗补助受益人口腔和整体健康状况较差。