Amedari McKing I, Atanda Adejare Jay, Amedari Ifeoma K, Monger Mauda, Walker Benjamin H
John D. Bower School of Population Health, University of Mississippi Medical Center, Jackson, MS, USA.
Meselson Center at RAND Corporation, Arlington, VA, USA.
BMC Oral Health. 2025 Apr 7;25(1):501. doi: 10.1186/s12903-025-05821-w.
Irregular dental visits due to cost-related delays contribute to poor oral health outcomes, dental needs, and emergency service utilization across the life course. The study investigated how predisposing, enabling, and needs factors are associated with cost-related delays in oral health care and postponed dental visits.
Using secondary data from the 2022 National Health Interview Survey for United States (U.S.) adults aged 18-64 years, the study conducted descriptive, bivariate, and multivariate data analyses. Separate multivariable logistic regressions were used to model cost-related delayed oral health care and postponed dental visits (no dental visit in the past 12 months) as a function of predisposing, enabling, and need factors (n = 17,513). Predictor variables included race, education, smoking status, age, gender and employment status (Predisposing factors), family income as a percentage of the Federal Poverty Level (FPL) and Health Service Deficit (HSD) variables (no health insurance, no usual medical primary care provider, > 12 months of last medical exam and delayed medical care due to cost) (Enabling factors), difficulty engaging in social activities and the presence of > 1 comorbidity (Need factors).
The prevalence of cost-related delayed oral health care was 20.2%, and that of postponed dental visits was 36.4%. Strong predictors for cost-related delayed oral health care emerged from predisposing factors (smoking OR = 1.47, 95% CI, 1.33, 1.62), enabling factors (no health insurance OR = 2.96, 95% CI, 2.56, 3.42), and need factors (difficulty engaging in social activity OR = 1.59, 95% CI, 1.34, 1.88) at p < 0.001. Enabling factors were the strongest predictors of postponed dental visits. The odds decreased with higher family income [> 400% FPL vs. < 100% FPL (OR, 0.50; 95% CI, 0.43, 0.58)], whereas the odds increased by 68%, 64%, 130%, and 57% for persons with no health insurance, no usual primary care provider, > 12 months of last medical exam, and delayed medical care due to cost, respectively.
Individual factors, including smoking, lack of health insurance, and difficulty engaging in social activity, were independently associated with cost-related delayed oral health care, and the strong links between postponed dental visits and HSDs provide a clear opportunity for advocating for medical and dental integration for patient-centered care.
因费用相关延误导致的不定期看牙会导致一生的口腔健康状况不佳、口腔护理需求未满足以及急诊服务利用率增加。本研究调查了易患因素、促成因素和需求因素如何与口腔保健中与费用相关的延误以及推迟看牙相关联。
利用2022年美国国家健康访谈调查针对18 - 64岁美国成年人的二手数据,本研究进行了描述性、双变量和多变量数据分析。分别使用多变量逻辑回归模型,将与费用相关的延迟口腔保健和推迟看牙(过去12个月内未看牙)作为易患因素、促成因素和需求因素的函数(n = 17513)。预测变量包括种族、教育程度、吸烟状况、年龄、性别和就业状况(易患因素)、家庭收入占联邦贫困线(FPL)的百分比以及健康服务不足(HSD)变量(无医疗保险、无常规医疗初级保健提供者、上次体检超过12个月以及因费用导致的医疗护理延迟)(促成因素)、参与社交活动困难以及存在1种以上合并症(需求因素)。
与费用相关的延迟口腔保健患病率为20.2%,推迟看牙的患病率为36.4%。易患因素(吸烟,OR = 1.47,95%CI,1.33,1.62)、促成因素(无医疗保险,OR = 2.96,95%CI,2.56,3.42)和需求因素(参与社交活动困难,OR = 1.59,95%CI,1.34,1.88)在p < 0.001时成为与费用相关的延迟口腔保健的有力预测因素。促成因素是推迟看牙的最强预测因素。随着家庭收入增加(>400%FPL与<100%FPL相比,OR,0.50;95%CI,0.43,0.58),几率降低,而无医疗保险、无常规初级保健提供者、上次体检超过12个月以及因费用导致医疗护理延迟的人群几率分别增加68%、64%、130%和57%。
个体因素,包括吸烟、缺乏医疗保险和参与社交活动困难,与费用相关的延迟口腔保健独立相关,推迟看牙与健康服务不足之间的紧密联系为倡导以患者为中心的医疗和牙科整合提供了明确机会。