Jamieson L M
Australian Research Centre for Population Oral Health, School of Dentistry, University of Adelaide, South Australia.
Community Dent Health. 2019 May 30;36(2):151. doi: 10.1922/CDH_SpecialIssueJamieson01.
In an increasingly globalised world, Trans-National Corporations (TNCs) wield considerable social, economic and political influence, both in the international market economy and within individual countries. The practices of TNCs can have positive or adverse effects on population health through production methods and products, shaping social determinants of health, or influencing the regulatory structures governing their activities. TNCs can contribute to health inequities if the health consequences arising from their practices have disproportionate adverse impacts on vulnerable populations or positive benefits for less vulnerable groups. Despite growing recognition of the implications for health, including oral health, arising from TNC practices, little research has sought to systematically assess the oral health and/or oral health equity impacts of TNCs. In the four papers that follow, we contribute to the discourse around oral health-related inequalities through the lens of power, human agency and TNCs. The papers formed the basis of a symposium entitled 'Transnational Corporations and oral health inequalities' at the 97th General Session of the International Association of Dental Research held June 2019 in Vancouver, British Columbia. The authors responded to the 2014 Lancet-University of Oslo Commission on Global Governance for Health call for greater attention to the health effects of TNC practices and the regulatory regimes in which they operate. The papers overview the role of TNCs in oral health inequalities at an international level, with a specific focus on illuminating their far-reaching influence on our everyday lives, from both epidemiological and sociological perspectives, and the multi-faceted positive or adverse effects on oral health this might have. Key TNC examples are provided by way of the sugar and the tobacco industries, with their impact on dental caries, periodontal diseases and head and neck cancers.
在日益全球化的世界中,跨国公司(TNCs)在国际市场经济以及各个国家内部都拥有巨大的社会、经济和政治影响力。跨国公司的行为通过生产方式和产品、塑造健康的社会决定因素或影响监管其活动的结构,可能对人群健康产生积极或不利影响。如果跨国公司行为所产生的健康后果对弱势群体产生不成比例的不利影响,或者对较不易受影响的群体产生积极益处,那么它们可能会加剧健康不平等。尽管人们越来越认识到跨国公司行为对包括口腔健康在内的健康的影响,但很少有研究试图系统地评估跨国公司对口腔健康和/或口腔健康公平性的影响。在接下来的四篇论文中,我们从权力、人类能动性和跨国公司的角度,为有关口腔健康相关不平等问题的讨论做出贡献。这些论文构成了2019年6月在不列颠哥伦比亚省温哥华举行的国际牙科研究协会第97届大会上题为“跨国公司与口腔健康不平等”的研讨会的基础。作者回应了2014年《柳叶刀》 - 奥斯陆大学全球卫生治理委员会呼吁,即更加关注跨国公司行为及其运营的监管制度对健康的影响。这些论文概述了跨国公司在国际层面口腔健康不平等中的作用,特别关注从流行病学和社会学角度阐明它们对我们日常生活的深远影响,以及这可能对口腔健康产生的多方面积极或不利影响。通过糖业和烟草业提供了关键的跨国公司实例,以及它们对龋齿、牙周疾病和头颈癌的影响。