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IADR/AADR
Journal of Dental Research releases studies
on oral health inequalities in older people
April 29, 2011 – The International and
American Associations for Dental Research (IADR/AADR)
have published two studies about oral health
inequalities in older people and low income
individuals.
These articles, titled "Income-related
Inequalities in Dental Service Utilization
by Europeans Aged 50+" by Stefan Listl, and
"Income Inequality and Tooth Loss in the
United States" by Eduardo Bernabe and Wagner
Marcenes, are published in the Journal of
Dental Research, the official publication of
the IADR/AADR.
The study by Barnebe and Mercenes explores
the relationship between state income
inequality and individual tooth loss among
386,629 adults in the United States who
participated in the 2008 Behavioral and Risk
Factor Surveillance System.
Multilevel models were used to test the
association between income inequality and
self-reported tooth loss after sequential
adjustment for state- (median household
income) and individual level confounders
(sex, age, race, education and household
income) as well as state- (percent receiving
fluoridated water and dentist to population
ratio) and individual-level mediators
(marital status and last dental visit).
Income inequality, as measured by the Gini
coefficient, was significantly associated
with tooth loss even after adjustment for
state- and individual-level confounders and
potential mediators.
A 5 percent change in state Gini coefficient
was associated with almost 20 percent higher
odds of reporting greater tooth loss. This
study provides support for the relationship
between state income inequality and
individual tooth loss in the United States.
The purpose of the study by Listl was to
describe income-related inequalities in
dental service utilization by the elderly
populations residing in different European
countries.
Listl and his team used data from the Survey
of Health, Ageing, and Retirement in Europe
(SHARE Wave 2), which contains information
on utilization of dental services by 33,358
individuals aged 50+ from 14 different
countries, and assessed income-related
inequalities in dental attendance,
preventive and/or operative dental
treatment.
The team's findings indicate
disproportionate concentration of access to
treatment among the rich elderly populations
in all countries included in the study. In
terms of absolute inequality, the team
similarly observed significantly higher
access to treatment by individuals located
in the highest income group compared with
peers located in the lowest income group
within all countries except Italy and
Czechia.
"Inequalities in oral health and access to
care are a growing global concern", said
IADR President E. Dianne Rekow. "These JDR
articles address this growing concern and
its impact on elderly populations and
low-income individuals."
A perspective article titled "Inequalities
in Oral Health of Elderly: Rising to the
Public Health Challenge?" was written by
Georgios Tsakos. In it, he calls for an
urgent need to address inequalities in oral
health—rather than only dental services—and
to put more emphasis on the social
determinants of health.
###
All three of these articles are published in
the Journal
of Dental Research. Visit http://jdr.sagepub.com/content/early/recent for
links to the complete articles or contact
Ingrid L. Thomas atithomas@iadr.org to
request the PDFs.
About the Journal of Dental Research
The IADR/AADR Journal of Dental Research is
a multidisciplinary journal dedicated to the
dissemination of new knowledge in all
sciences relevant to dentistry and the oral
cavity and associated structures in health
and disease. At 4.195, the JDR holds the
highest Five-Year Impact Factor of all
dental journals publishing original
research, with a cited half-life >10 years,
reflecting the influential nature of the
Journal's content. It also has the highest
Eigenfactor Score in the field.
About the International Association for
Dental Research
The International Association for Dental
Research (IADR) is a nonprofit organization
with nearly 12,500 individual members
worldwide, dedicated to: (1) advancing
research and increasing knowledge to improve
oral health, (2) supporting the oral health
research community, and (3) facilitating the
communication and application of research
findings for the improvement of oral health
worldwide. To learn more, visit www.iadr.org.
The American Association for Dental Research
(AADR) is the largest Division of IADR, with
nearly 4,000 members in the United States.
To learn more, visit www.aadronline.org.
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