Faculty of Medicine and Health, School of Dentistry, The University of Sydney, Surry Hills, New South Wales, Australia.
Health Care Management, College of Business, Government and Law, Flinders University, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia.
Community Dent Oral Epidemiol. 2023 Apr;51(2):327-344. doi: 10.1111/cdoe.12745. Epub 2022 Mar 27.
Culturally and linguistically diverse (CALD) communities experience widespread inequalities in dental care utilization. While, several studies have reported factors contributing to such inequalities, a synthesis of evidence is lacking for CALD carers. This review examined the barriers and facilitators to dental care utilization among CALD carers.
Medline, CINAHL, ProQuest, Scopus and Web of Science were searched for dental utilization and related factors, without geographic limitations. An integrated mixed-method design was adopted, where both qualitative and quantitative findings were combined into a single synthesis. Critical appraisal was conducted using JBI tools, and a Universal Health Coverage (UHC) framework guided the synthesis approach. Reliability and researcher triangulation occurred throughout the conduct of this review.
A total of 20 papers were included: qualitative (n = 8), quantitative (n = 8) and mixed method (n = 4). Studies were from Australia, Canada, South Korea, Trinidad and Tobago, United Kingdom and the United States. Three studies insufficiently reported confounding variables and nine qualitative papers lacked philosophical perspectives. Affordability was the foremost barrier at the system level, followed by psychosocial negative provider experiences and language/communication issues at the provider level. Cultural, knowledge, attitudes and beliefs were individual-family level factors. Utilizing a UHC framework, the barriers and facilitators were aggregated at three levels; financial-system, provider and individual-family levels and illustrated in the rainbow model of CALD oral health.
The review strengthens evidence for multilayered, system-related policies and culturally sensitive provision of services for reducing oral healthcare inequalities in CALD carers.
文化和语言多样化(CALD)社区在牙科保健利用方面普遍存在不平等现象。尽管有几项研究报告了导致这种不平等的因素,但缺乏针对 CALD 照顾者的证据综合。本综述检查了 CALD 照顾者牙科保健利用的障碍和促进因素。
无地理限制地在 Medline、CINAHL、ProQuest、Scopus 和 Web of Science 上搜索牙科利用和相关因素。采用综合混合方法设计,将定性和定量研究结果合并为一个综合结果。使用 JBI 工具进行批判性评估,并采用全民健康覆盖(UHC)框架指导综合方法。在进行本综述的过程中,进行了可靠性和研究人员三角测量。
共纳入 20 篇论文:定性研究(n=8)、定量研究(n=8)和混合方法研究(n=4)。研究来自澳大利亚、加拿大、韩国、特立尼达和多巴哥、英国和美国。有 3 项研究对混杂变量的报告不充分,9 篇定性论文缺乏哲学观点。在系统层面上,可负担性是最大的障碍,其次是提供者层面上的心理社会负面提供者体验和语言/沟通问题。文化、知识、态度和信念是个人-家庭层面的因素。利用 UHC 框架,将障碍和促进因素汇总在三个层面上:财务系统、提供者和个人-家庭层面,并在 CALD 口腔健康的彩虹模型中进行说明。
本综述加强了针对多层次、与系统相关的政策和提供文化敏感服务的证据,以减少 CALD 照顾者的口腔保健不平等。