Roseman University of Health Sciences, College of Dental Medicine, 10894 S. River Front Parkway, South Jordan, UT 84095, United States.
Roseman University of Health Sciences, College of Dental Medicine, 10894 S. River Front Parkway, South Jordan, UT 84095, United States; Portland State University Institute on Aging, 506 SW Mill St. Suite 470, Portland, OR 97201, United States.
J Dent. 2022 Jul;122:104157. doi: 10.1016/j.jdent.2022.104157. Epub 2022 May 8.
This study used a national database to update and examine current differences in men's and women's oral health and oral health behaviours in the United States.
Data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey for the 2017-2018 cycle were used to explore the relationship between males and females and their oral health. Multivariate analyses assessed for gender differences in oral health behaviors between genders after controlling for sample demographic characteristics.
The final sample consisted of 4,741 participants. Males tended to have fewer dental visits, worse perception of their gum and tooth health, poorer flossing habits, and more root caries. Females were more proactive in visiting dentists and displayed a greater awareness of oral health. Females were less likely to report discussing oral cancer screening with their dentist even though they were screened more often. On examination, males were more often advised to seek urgent dental care than females. All these differences were statistically significant at p<0.05, although the effect size for examination variables was small (Phi <0.1).
Oral health and oral health behaviours demonstrate gender differences with men reporting poorer oral health, poorer oral hygiene habits, and fewer dental visits. These findings suggest gender-targeted strategies have the potential to improve oral health and reduce gender-related disparities.
This study found that women exhibit better oral health practices and behaviours. These differences may cause a disproportionate burden of oral disease in men and highlight the need for dentists, hygienists, and those interested in dental public health to develop gender-specific strategies to address these inequalities.
本研究利用国家数据库更新并考察了美国男性和女性口腔健康和口腔健康行为的当前差异。
本研究使用了 2017-2018 年全国健康和营养调查的数据来探讨男性和女性之间及其口腔健康的关系。多变量分析评估了在控制样本人口统计学特征后,两性之间口腔健康行为的性别差异。
最终样本包括 4741 名参与者。男性看牙医的次数较少,对牙龈和牙齿健康的感知较差,牙线使用习惯较差,根龋较多。女性更积极主动地看牙医,对口腔健康的认识也更强。尽管女性接受口腔癌筛查的频率更高,但她们更有可能不与牙医讨论口腔癌筛查。检查时,男性比女性更有可能被建议寻求紧急牙科护理。所有这些差异在统计学上均有显著意义(p<0.05),尽管检查变量的效应量较小(Phi<0.1)。
口腔健康和口腔健康行为存在性别差异,男性报告的口腔健康较差,口腔卫生习惯较差,看牙医的次数较少。这些发现表明,有针对性别差异的策略有可能改善口腔健康,减少与性别相关的差异。
本研究发现女性表现出更好的口腔健康行为。这些差异可能导致男性口腔疾病负担不成比例,并强调牙医、口腔卫生师和关注口腔公共卫生的人需要制定针对特定性别的策略来解决这些不平等问题。