Structural Determinants and Children’s Oral Health: A Cross-National Study

Author:

Baker S.R.1,Foster Page L.2,Thomson W.M.2,Broomhead T.1,Bekes K.3,Benson P.E.1,Aguilar-Diaz F.4,Do L.5,Hirsch C.6,Marshman Z.1,McGrath C.7,Mohamed A.8,Robinson P.G.9,Traebert J.10,Turton B.11,Gibson B.J.1

Affiliation:

1. Unit of Dental Public Health, School of Clinical Dentistry, Claremont Crescent, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK

2. Department of Oral Sciences, Sir John Walsh Research Institute, Faculty of Dentistry, University of Otago, Otago, New Zealand

3. Department of Paediatric Dentistry, School of Dentistry, Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria

4. Department of Public Health, National Autonomous University of Mexico León Unit, León, Guanajuato, México

5. Australian Research Centre for Population Oral Health, The University of Adelaide, Adelaide, Australia

6. Department of Paediatric Dentistry, University of Leipzig, Leipzig, Germany

7. Periodontology & Public Health, Faculty of Dentistry, University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong

8. Department of Dental Services, Ministry of Health, Brunei Darussalam

9. Bristol Dental School, The University of Bristol, Bristol, UK

10. Postgraduate Program in Health Sciences, University of Southern Santa Catarina, Santa Catarina, Brazil

11. Department of Dentistry, University of Puthisastra, Phnom Penh, Cambodia

Abstract

Much research on children’s oral health has focused on proximal determinants at the expense of distal (upstream) factors. Yet, such upstream factors—the so-called structural determinants of health—play a crucial role. Children’s lives, and in turn their health, are shaped by politics, economic forces, and social and public policies. The aim of this study was to examine the relationship between children’s clinical (number of decayed, missing, and filled teeth) and self-reported oral health (oral health–related quality of life) and 4 key structural determinants (governance, macroeconomic policy, public policy, and social policy) as outlined in the World Health Organization’s Commission for Social Determinants of Health framework. Secondary data analyses were carried out using subnational epidemiological samples of 8- to 15-y-olds in 11 countries ( N = 6,648): Australia (372), New Zealand (three samples; 352, 202, 429), Brunei (423), Cambodia (423), Hong Kong (542), Malaysia (439), Thailand (261, 506), United Kingdom (88, 374), Germany (1498), Mexico (335), and Brazil (404). The results indicated that the type of political regime, amount of governance (e.g., rule of law, accountability), gross domestic product per capita, employment ratio, income inequality, type of welfare regime, human development index, government expenditure on health, and out-of-pocket (private) health expenditure by citizens were all associated with children’s oral health. The structural determinants accounted for between 5% and 21% of the variance in children’s oral health quality-of-life scores. These findings bring attention to the upstream or structural determinants as an understudied area but one that could reap huge rewards for public health dentistry research and the oral health inequalities policy agenda.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Dentistry

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