Oral health risk factors and overall dental treatment needs for incoming air force recruits

Author:

Ryan J. Brett1ORCID,Scott Thayer1,McDonough Robert1,Schindler David2ORCID,Irwin Scott P.2,Badner Victor M.3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Health Policy and Health Services Research Boston University Henry M. Goldman School of Dental Medicine Boston Massachusetts USA

2. USAF Dental Research and Consultation Service (DRCS) Institute of Surgical Research San Antonio Texas USA

3. Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Department of Dentistry Jacob Medical Center Bronx New York USA

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveTo determine if relationships exist between the total dental treatment needs of incoming Air Force recruits and non‐clincal demographic and oral‐health related factors.MethodsData from the 2018 Air Force Recruit Oral Health Study (ROHS) was used, an anonymized sample of 1330 AF recruits that included a comprehensive oral exam and survey collecting demographic and oral health behavior information. The primary outcome variable was the total number of dental treatment needs for recruits, and independent predictor variables included select socio‐demographic factors and wellness behaviors. Along with descriptive statistics, a multivariable negative binomial regression analysis was performed to assess the relationship between variables with a normalized weight making the final results representative of all incoming recruits.ResultsThe final adjusted analysis showed that an incoming recruit's self‐rated oral health, dental coverage prior to enlistment, need for a dental visit within the last 12 months, sugar intake, and tobacco use increased their risk for dental treatment needs.ConclusionThis is the first study to assess the relationship between specific risk indicators and increased dental treatment needs while adjusting other related covariates. Factors associated with dental treatment needs were identified that provide Air Force leaders with actionable information to directly improve recruit oral health and military readiness by identifying new airmen at the highest risk for excessive dental care needs while at basic military training.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,General Dentistry

Reference25 articles.

1. Joint Chiefs of Staff.Joint Publication 1–0; Joint Personnel Support. [cited 2022 Dec 13]https://www.jcs.mil/Doctrine/Joint-Doctrine-Pubs/1-0-Personnel-Series/

2. About the Military Health System.Military Health System. [cited 2022 May 12] n.d.https://www.health.mil/About-MHS

3. Readiness Of Medical Providers In The Military Health System: Overview Of Operational And Policy Considerations

4. USAF Dental Readiness Classifications and Caries-Risk Assessment

5. AIR FORCE MANUAL 47‐101.Managing Dental Sevices. U.S. Air Force.2020https://static.e-publishing.af.mil/production/1/af_sg/publication/afman47-101/afman47-101.pdf

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