Department of Dental Public Health, Faculty of Dentistry, King Abdulaziz University, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.
Institute of Dentistry, Barts and The London School of Medicine and Dentistry, Queen Mary University of London, London, UK.
BMC Oral Health. 2022 Apr 21;22(1):135. doi: 10.1186/s12903-022-02162-w.
This study used the Anderson Behavioral Model to assess the socioeconomic inequalities in dental services utilization among adults in Saudi Arabia, along with other predictors of utilization, to inform future planning of dental care services.
This cross-sectional study was a secondary analysis using national data from the 2019 Kingdom of Saudi Arabia World Health Survey (KSAWHS). The survey consisted of two interviewer-administered questionnaires: one household and one individual interview. The questions covered predisposing factors (age, gender, marital status, nationality, education, employment), enabling factors (income, household wealth, area-based socioeconomic class, health insurance, eligibility for free governmental health care, transportation and region of residence) and self-reported need for dental treatment. The main outcome was dental utilization in the past year; predisposing, enabling and need factors were independent variables. Hierarchical logistic regression analyses identified significant predictors of dental utilization, applying survey weights to adjust for the complex survey design. Adjusted odds ratios with 95% confidence intervals and p values were reported in the final model.
The final dataset included 8535 adults (response rate = 95.4%). Twenty percent of adults had visited the dentist at least once in the past year (95% CI 18-21%). There were socioeconomic inequalities in dental utilization. High household income (OR 1.43, p = 0.043), second and middle household wealth status (OR 1.51, p = 0.003 and OR 1.57, p = 0.006) and access to free governmental health care (OR 2.05, p = 0.004) were significant predictors in the final regression model along with perceived need for dental treatment (OR 52.09, p < 0.001).
Socioeconomic inequalities in the utilization of dental services exist in Saudi Arabia. The need for treatment was the strongest predictor suggesting predominantly symptomatic attendance. Increasing awareness about the importance of preventive dental visits rather than symptomatic attendance could be an important policy implication to improve oral health and optimize dental care expenditure. Further research should explore the drivers for adults to seek preventive care in the absence of any recognized dental problems.
本研究使用安德森行为模型评估了沙特阿拉伯成年人在牙科服务利用方面的社会经济不平等,以及利用的其他预测因素,为未来的牙科保健服务规划提供信息。
这是一项使用 2019 年沙特阿拉伯王国世界卫生调查(KSAWHS)的全国数据进行的横断面研究。该调查由两个访谈者管理的问卷组成:一个家庭问卷和一个个人访谈。问题涵盖了倾向因素(年龄、性别、婚姻状况、国籍、教育、就业)、促成因素(收入、家庭财富、基于区域的社会经济阶层、医疗保险、获得免费政府医疗保健的资格、交通和居住地区)和自我报告的牙科治疗需求。主要结果是过去一年的牙科利用情况;倾向、促成和需求因素是自变量。分层逻辑回归分析确定了牙科利用的显著预测因素,并应用调查权重来调整复杂的调查设计。报告了最终模型中调整后的优势比及其 95%置信区间和 p 值。
最终数据集包括 8535 名成年人(应答率为 95.4%)。20%的成年人在过去一年中至少看过一次牙医(95%CI 18-21%)。牙科服务利用存在社会经济不平等。高家庭收入(OR 1.43,p=0.043)、第二和中等家庭财富状况(OR 1.51,p=0.003 和 OR 1.57,p=0.006)以及获得免费政府医疗保健(OR 2.05,p=0.004)是最终回归模型中的显著预测因素,同时还有对牙科治疗的需求(OR 52.09,p<0.001)。
沙特阿拉伯存在牙科服务利用方面的社会经济不平等。治疗需求是最强的预测因素,表明主要是症状性就诊。提高对预防牙科就诊重要性的认识,而不是症状性就诊,可能是改善口腔健康和优化牙科保健支出的一个重要政策影响。进一步的研究应该探讨成年人在没有任何公认的牙科问题的情况下寻求预防保健的驱动因素。