Socio‐economic status and access to fluoridated water in Queensland: an ecological data linkage study

Author:

Sexton Christopher T1,Ha Diep H1,Le Thu1,Lalloo Ratilal1,Ford Pauline1,Do Loc G1ORCID,Stormon Nicole12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. The University of Queensland Brisbane QLD

2. Metro North Hospital and Health Service, Queensland Health Brisbane QLD

Abstract

AbstractObjectivesTo investigate the relationship between access to fluoridated drinking water and area‐level socio‐economic status in Queensland.Study designEcological, geospatial data linkage study.SettingQueensland, by statistical area level 2 (SA2), 2021.Main outcome measuresProportion of SA2s and of residents with access to fluoridated drinking water (natural or supplemented); relationship at SA2 level between access to fluoridated water and socio‐economic status (Index of Relative Socio‐economic Advantage and Disadvantage, IRSAD; Index of Economic Resources, IER).ResultsIn 2021, an estimated 4 050 168 people (79.4% of the population) and 397 SA2 regions (72.7%) in Queensland had access to fluoridated water. Access was concentrated in the southeastern corner of the state. After adjusting for SA2 population, log area, and population density, the likelihood of access to fluoridated drinking water almost doubled for each 100‐rank increase in IRSAD (adjusted odds ratio [aOR], 1.93; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.59–2.36) or IER (aOR, 1.77; 95% CI, 1.50–2.11).ConclusionsThe 2012 decision to devolve responsibility for water fluoridation decisions and funding from the Queensland government to local councils means that residents in lower socio‐economic areas are less likely to have access to fluoridated water than those in more advantaged areas, exacerbating their already greater risk of dental disease. Queensland water fluoridation policy should be revised so that all residents can benefit from this evidence‐based public health intervention for reducing the prevalence of dental caries.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Medicine

Reference26 articles.

1. National Health and Medical Research Council. Water fluoridation: dental and other human health outcomes (NHMRC ref. EH43). July2017.https://www.nhmrc.gov.au/file/2861/download?token=ATb5PO0f(viewed June 2023).

2. Water fluoridation for the prevention of dental caries;Iheozor‐Ejiofor Z;Cochrane Database Syst Rev,2015

3. Economic evaluations in water-fluoridation: a scoping review

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