Abstract
Abstract
Background
Previous research has shown that the use of dental care services has a significant socioeconomic gradient. Lower income groups tend to use dental care services less, and they often have poorer dental health than higher income groups. The purpose of this study is to evaluate how an increase in income affects the use of dental care services among a low-income population.
Methods
The study examines the causal effect of increasing cash transfers on the use of dental care services by utilizing unique register-based data from a randomized field experiment conducted in Finland in 2017–2018. The Finnish basic income experiment introduced an exogenous increase in the income of persons who previously received basic unemployment benefits. Register-based data on the study population’s use of public and private dental care services were collected both for the treatment group (N = 2,000) and the control group (N = 173,222) of the experiment over a five-year period 2015–2019: two years before, two years during, and one year after the experiment. The experiment’s average treatment effect on the use of dental care services was estimated with OLS regressions.
Results
The Finnish basic income experiment had no detectable effect on the overall use of dental care services. However, it decreased the probability of visiting public dental care (-2.7% points, -4.7%, p =.017) and increased the average amount of out-of-pocket spending on private care (12.1 euros, 29.8%, p =.032). The results suggest that, even in a country with a universal public dental care coverage, changes in cash transfers do affect the dental care patterns of low-income populations.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference55 articles.
1. Hung M, Moffat R, Gill G, Lauren E, Ruiz-Negrón B, Rosales MN, et al. Oral health as a gateway to overall health and well-being: Surveillance of the geriatric population in the United States. Spec Care Dent. 2019;39:4.
2. WHO. Fact sheets: oral health. WHO; 2020.
3. Petersen PE. The world oral health report 2003: continuous improvement of oral health in the 21st century: the approach of the WHO Global Oral Health Programme. Community Dent Oral Epidemiol. 2003;31:1.
4. Michaud DS, Liu Y, Meyer M, Giovannucci E, Joshipura K. Periodontal Disease, tooth loss, and Cancer Risk in Male Health professionals: a prospective cohort study. Lancet. Oncology. 2008;9:6.
5. Azarpazhooh A, Tenenbaum HC. Separating fact from fiction: Use of High-Level evidence from Research syntheses to identify diseases and disorders Associated with Periodontal Disease. J Can Dent Association. 2012;78:c25.
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
1. Digital Education and Awareness for Oral Health;Advances in Medical Technologies and Clinical Practice;2024-08-30