GeoHealth Laboratory, Geospatial Research Institute, University of Canterbury, New Zealand.
Ministry of Health, Wellington, New Zealand.
Br Dent J. 2020 Feb;228(4):269-276. doi: 10.1038/s41415-020-1304-5.
Introduction Despite improvements in oral health outcomes in New Zealand over the last number of decades, there are still high levels of preventable tooth decay in adults and children. We investigate the prevalence and spatial variation of non-fluoride toothpaste use in a nationally representative sample of adults and children in New Zealand.Method Individual-level self-reported data were sourced from the New Zealand Health Survey (2017/18). Both child (n = 4,723) and adult (n = 13,869) data were used. Data included sociodemographic (for example, age), socioeconomic (for example, area-level deprivation) and dental-related (for example, type of toothpaste used) variables.Results Overall, 6.8% of adults and 6.4% of children use non-fluoride toothpaste. When split by deprivation, the highest prevalence of non-fluoride toothpaste use for children and adults was in the moderate to least deprived areas, while the lowest prevalence was in the most deprived areas. When disaggregated by ethnicity, the Asian population had the highest prevalence of non-fluoride toothpaste use for both adults and children compared to Māori, Pacific and European/Other. There was little difference in prevalence by rural/urban classification; however, prevalence varied geographically across the study area.Conclusion This is the first study that uses a nationally representative sample of adults and children to show variation in the use of non-fluoride toothpaste in New Zealand.
简介
尽管在过去几十年中新西兰的口腔健康状况有所改善,但成年人和儿童仍存在大量可预防的龋齿。我们调查了新西兰全国代表性成年人和儿童样本中使用非氟化物牙膏的流行率和空间差异。
方法
从新西兰健康调查(2017/18 年)中获取个人层面的自我报告数据。使用了儿童(n=4723)和成人(n=13869)的数据。数据包括社会人口统计学(例如,年龄)、社会经济(例如,地区贫困程度)和牙科相关变量(例如,使用的牙膏类型)。
结果
总体而言,6.8%的成年人和 6.4%的儿童使用非氟化物牙膏。按贫困程度划分,儿童和成年人使用非氟化物牙膏的比例最高的是中低贫困地区,而比例最低的是最贫困地区。按族裔划分,与毛利人、太平洋岛民和欧洲/其他族裔相比,亚洲成年人和儿童使用非氟化物牙膏的比例最高。农村/城市分类的流行率差异不大;然而,研究区域的地理分布存在差异。
结论
这是第一项使用全国代表性的成年人和儿童样本的研究,表明新西兰非氟化物牙膏使用存在差异。