Differential effect of social mobility on tooth loss by race in adulthood: 1982 Pelotas Birth Cohort Study

Author:

Karam Sarah Arangurem12ORCID,Schuch Helena Silveira1ORCID,Demarco Flávio Fernando13ORCID,Horta Bernardo L.3ORCID,Borrell Luisa N.4ORCID,Celeste Roger Keller5ORCID,Correa Marcos Britto1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Graduate Program in Dentistry Universidade Federal de Pelotas Pelotas Brazil

2. Professional Master's in Health in the Life Cycle Catholic University of Pelotas Pelotas Brazil

3. Graduate Program in Epidemiology Universidade Federal de Pelotas Pelotas Brazil

4. Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Graduate School of Public Health and Health Policy The City University of New York New York New York USA

5. Graduate Program in Dentistry Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul Porto Alegre Brazil

Abstract

AbstractObjectivesTo examine the association between social mobility and tooth loss in adults from the 1982 Pelotas Birth Cohort Study and whether race modifies this association.MethodsThe Oral Health Study used data from 541 individuals who were followed up to 31 years of age. Social mobility, composed of the participants' socioeconomic position (SEP) at birth and at age 30, was categorized as never poor, upwardly mobile, downwardly mobile and always poor. The outcome was the prevalence of at least one tooth lost due to dental caries when the participants were examined at 31 years of age. The effect modifier was race (Black/Brown versus white people). Log‐binomial regression models were used to estimate crude and sex‐adjusted prevalence ratios (PR) and to determine whether the association varied with race. Statistical interactions were tested using an additive scale.ResultsThe prevalence of any tooth loss was 50.8% (n = 274). In social mobility groups, the prevalence of at least one tooth lost in the never‐poor group was about 31% points higher for Black/Brown (68.2%) than for white people (37.4%). Antagonistic findings were found for the interaction between race and social mobility (Sinergy Index = 0.48; 95% CI 0.24, 0.99; and relative excess of risk due to the interaction = −1.38; 95% CI −2.34, −0.42), suggesting that the observed joint effect of race and social mobility on tooth loss was lower than the expected sum of these factors. The estimates for Black/Brown people were smaller for those who were always poor during their lives, relative to their white counterparts.ConclusionsThe findings suggest a higher prevalence of at least one tooth lost among people in the downward mobile SEP group and Black/Brown people. Greater racial inequity was found among Black/Brown people who had never experienced episodes of poverty, with Black/Brown people having a greater prevalence of at least one tooth lost than their white counterparts.

Funder

Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior

Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico

Publisher

Wiley

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