Department of Global Health Promotion, Tokyo Medical and Dental University, 1-5-45 Yushima, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo, 113-8510, Japan.
Department of Health and Welfare Services, National Institute of Public Health, 2-3-6 Minami, Wako-shi, Saitama, 351-0197, Japan.
Sci Rep. 2019 Aug 5;9(1):11345. doi: 10.1038/s41598-019-47730-3.
Globally many children are living with grandparents, and it has been suggested that grandparent co-residence may be associated with dental caries in infants and toddlers possibly through passive parenting style, accompanied by children's cariogenic behaviors such as feeding sugary sweets. However, little is known about this association in schoolchildren, adjusted for socioeconomic status. Therefore, this study investigates the association between grandparent co-residence, socioeconomic status, and dental caries among schoolchildren. All caregivers of first-grade children (age 6-7 years) in Adachi City, Tokyo, were administered a questionnaire about children's grandparent co-residence status and oral health-related behaviors, and responses were linked with dental examination records conducted by school dentists (N = 3,578). Multilevel Poisson regression analysis was applied to examine the association between grandparent co-residence, socioeconomic status, and dental caries status for each individual tooth, adjusting for potential covariates. The percentage of dental caries experience was higher among children living with grandparents (48.9%) than among children living without grandparents (44.0%). The risk for caries, however, did not differ according to grandparent co-residence status when tooth type, child's age and sex, and parental socio-economic status and structure were adjusted (PR, 1.13; 95%CI, 0.90, 1.42). The association between grandparent co-residence and dental caries among early school-aged children in urban Japan was confounded by socioeconomic status.
在全球范围内,许多儿童与祖父母生活在一起,有人认为,与祖父母共同居住可能与婴幼儿龋齿有关,其潜在机制可能是被动的育儿方式,伴随着儿童的致龋行为,如喂食含糖甜食。然而,对于调整了社会经济地位的学龄儿童,关于这种关联的了解甚少。因此,本研究调查了在学龄儿童中,与祖父母共同居住、社会经济地位和龋齿之间的关联。在东京足立区,对一年级儿童(6-7 岁)的所有照顾者进行了一项关于儿童与祖父母共同居住状况和与口腔健康相关行为的问卷调查,并将回答与由学校牙医进行的口腔检查记录相关联(N=3578)。应用多水平泊松回归分析,在校正潜在混杂因素后,针对每颗牙齿,检查与祖父母共同居住、社会经济地位和龋齿状况之间的关联。与没有与祖父母共同居住的儿童(44.0%)相比,与祖父母共同居住的儿童(48.9%)的龋齿经历比例更高。然而,当调整牙齿类型、儿童年龄和性别以及父母的社会经济地位和结构后,龋齿的风险并没有因与祖父母共同居住状况而不同(PR,1.13;95%CI,0.90,1.42)。在日本城市的早期学龄儿童中,与祖父母共同居住和龋齿之间的关联被社会经济地位所混淆。