Suppr超能文献

社会经济不平等解释了饮用水源与乳牙龋齿之间的关联。

Socioeconomic inequalities explain the association between source of drinking water and dental caries in primary dentition.

机构信息

Graduate Program in Dentistry, Federal University of Pelotas, Rua Gonçalves Chaves, 457 - Centro, CEP 96015-560, Pelotas, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil.

Operative Dentistry Department, Federal University of Paraíba, Campus I - Cidade Universitária, CEP 58051-900, João Pessoa, Paraíba, Brazil.

出版信息

J Dent. 2021 Mar;106:103584. doi: 10.1016/j.jdent.2021.103584. Epub 2021 Jan 16.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE

To evaluate the association between source of drinking water and dental caries at age 5 and to test whether socioeconomic conditions act as confounding factors in such association.

METHODS

The study was carried out in a sub-sample of the 2004 Pelotas Birth Cohort, which comprised the application of a questionnaire and clinical oral examination. The exposure was source of drinking water, collected through a question to the primary caregiver. The outcome was dental caries in primary dentition, measured through several standardized indicators of the decayed, missing and filled teeth index (dmft), assessing past and present dental caries. Socioeconomic indicators (family income and maternal education) were identified as potential confounding factors. After descriptive analysis, the association between source of water and measures of dental caries was assessed by Regression models.

RESULTS

1,084 children were evaluated and had complete information in all variables (83.2 % of the targeted sample). Dental caries experience was observed in 48.7 % of the children, with a mean of 1.9 decayed, missing or filled teeth. Most children consumed water from public water supply (76.0 %), and a socioeconomic pattern was observed, with children from lower income more likely to drink water from public supply. In crude analysis, children who consumed bottled water had a lower risk of decayed teeth, lower experience of dental caries and less severe disease. No associations were observed after adjustments for socioeconomic conditions.

CONCLUSION

Underlying socioeconomic inequalities explained the association between prevalence and severity of dental caries in primary dentition and source of drinking water.

CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE

Drinking fluoridated tap water is as effective in dental caries prevention as bottled water with acceptable levels of fluoride, with the advantage of being accessible to all. Oral health prevention and treatment should be implemented as early in life as possible and should take into consideration the family's socioeconomic context.

摘要

目的

评估 5 岁时饮用水源与龋齿的关系,并检验社会经济条件是否为该关联的混杂因素。

方法

本研究为 2004 年佩洛塔斯出生队列的子样本研究,包括问卷调查和临床口腔检查。暴露因素为饮用水源,通过询问主要照顾者收集。结果为乳牙龋齿,通过龋失补牙数(dmft)的几个标准化指标进行测量,评估过去和现在的龋齿情况。社会经济指标(家庭收入和母亲教育)被确定为潜在的混杂因素。在描述性分析后,通过回归模型评估水源与龋齿测量值之间的关系。

结果

共评估了 1084 名儿童,他们在所有变量上均有完整信息(占目标样本的 83.2%)。48.7%的儿童有龋齿经历,平均有 1.9 颗龋齿、缺失或填补的牙齿。大多数儿童饮用公共供水的水(76.0%),存在社会经济模式,收入较低的儿童更有可能饮用公共供水的水。在未经调整的分析中,饮用瓶装水的儿童患龋齿的风险较低,龋齿经历较少,疾病程度较轻。调整社会经济条件后,未观察到相关性。

结论

社会经济不平等解释了饮用水源与乳牙龋齿患病率和严重程度之间的关系。

临床意义

饮用含氟自来水在预防龋齿方面与含氟量可接受的瓶装水一样有效,且具有向所有人普及的优势。应尽早在生活中实施口腔健康预防和治疗,并考虑到家庭的社会经济背景。

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验