Suppr超能文献

饮食模式是否在社会经济地位与龋齿之间的关系中起中介作用?

Is dietary pattern a mediator of the relationship between socioeconomic status and dental caries?

机构信息

Postgraduate Program in Dentistry, Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Ramiro Barcelos, 2492, Santa Cecília, Porto Alegre, RS, Brazil.

Department of Oral Health Sciences, School of Dentistry and Department of Health Services, School of Public Health University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA.

出版信息

Clin Oral Investig. 2021 Sep;25(9):5441-5447. doi: 10.1007/s00784-021-03852-5. Epub 2021 Apr 7.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE

To investigate whether a healthy diet and added sugar mediate the relationship between socioeconomic status and oral health status in adults.

METHODS

This is a secondary cross-sectional analysis of adult participants from the 2015-2016 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey from the United States (n=3367). Structural equation modeling tested direct and indirect pathways from a latent variable for socioeconomic status to oral health via healthy eating (Health Eating Index) and added sugar in a multiple-mediator multiple-outcome model.

RESULTS

Added sugar was directly associated with untreated dental caries [Standardized coefficient (SC)=0.10], and healthy eating was directly associated with both untreated dental caries (SC=-0.11) and tooth loss (SC=-0.05). Higher socioeconomic status was associated with lower untreated dental caries through direct (SC =-0.246) and small indirect paths via healthy diet (SC= -0.026), lower consumption of added sugar (SC=-0.007), and dental visits (SC=-0.162). Higher socioeconomic status was associated with fewer teeth lost through direct (SC =-0.306) and very small indirect paths via healthy diet (SC=-0.016), added sugar consumption (SC=-0.001), and untreated dental caries (SC=-0.094).

CONCLUSIONS

Both socioeconomic status and dietary pattern independently contributed to tooth loss and dental caries. The contribution of dietary factors as a mediator to socioeconomic inequities in oral health was small, and statistically significant.

CLINICAL RELEVANCE

A systems approach to socioeconomic inequities in oral health takes into account the complex relationships between socioeconomics, dietary patterns, oral health and health. Socioeconomic conditions and nutrition, as common risk factors to noncommunicable disorders, should be tackled in programs to improve oral health.

摘要

目的

探讨健康饮食和添加糖是否在成年人的社会经济地位与口腔健康状况之间起到中介作用。

方法

这是对来自美国 2015-2016 年全国健康和营养调查的成年参与者(n=3367)进行的二次横断面分析。结构方程模型通过健康饮食(健康饮食指数)和添加糖在多中介多结果模型中,从社会经济地位的潜在变量到口腔健康,测试了直接和间接途径。

结果

添加糖与未经治疗的龋齿直接相关(标准化系数(SC)=0.10),健康饮食与未经治疗的龋齿(SC=-0.11)和牙齿缺失(SC=-0.05)直接相关。较高的社会经济地位与未经治疗的龋齿呈负相关,通过直接途径(SC=-0.246)和通过健康饮食的小间接途径(SC=-0.026)、较低的添加糖消耗(SC=-0.007)和牙齿检查(SC=-0.162)。较高的社会经济地位与牙齿缺失呈负相关,通过直接途径(SC=-0.306)和通过健康饮食的非常小的间接途径(SC=-0.016)、添加糖消耗(SC=-0.001)和未经治疗的龋齿(SC=-0.094)。

结论

社会经济地位和饮食模式都独立地导致了牙齿缺失和龋齿。饮食因素作为社会经济不平等导致口腔健康差异的中介作用很小,但具有统计学意义。

临床意义

一种系统的方法来考虑社会经济地位、饮食模式、口腔健康和健康之间的复杂关系,可以解决口腔健康方面的社会经济不平等问题。社会经济条件和营养作为非传染性疾病的共同危险因素,应该在改善口腔健康的方案中得到解决。

文献检索

告别复杂PubMed语法,用中文像聊天一样搜索,搜遍4000万医学文献。AI智能推荐,让科研检索更轻松。

立即免费搜索

文件翻译

保留排版,准确专业,支持PDF/Word/PPT等文件格式,支持 12+语言互译。

免费翻译文档

深度研究

AI帮你快速写综述,25分钟生成高质量综述,智能提取关键信息,辅助科研写作。

立即免费体验