Monica A Fisher1, Gregg H Gilbert, Brent J Shelton. 1. Department of Diagnostic Sciences, School of Dentistry, University of Alabama at Birmingham, 1530 3rd Avenue South, SDB 111, Birmingham, AL 35294-0007, USA. mafisher@uab.edu
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To describe racial differences in receipt of dental services and dental insurance; and to determine the effectiveness of specific dental services in facilitating recovery in symptom-specific and race-specific subgroups. STUDY DESIGN AND SETTING: Using a restricted cohort analytic method, Florida Dental Care Study prospective cohort data were used to quantify associations between dental service use and the quality of life measure, "recovery" from oral disadvantage due to functional limitation. RESULTS: Non-Hispanic Whites (NHW) were more likely to have a dental visit [odds ratio (OR); 95% confidence interval: 3.5; 2.2-5.3], corrective treatment (OR=2.1; 1.3-3.3), caps (OR=28.8; 6.6-126.4), and dental insurance coverage for caps (OR=2.9; 1.4-5.9). After adjusting for other covariates: (1) among NHW with severe gum disease, those receiving extractions were more likely to recover (OR=7.8; 1.0-59.1), but those receiving caps were less likely to recover (OR=0.1; 0.01-0.6); (2) among Non-Hispanic Blacks (NHB) with a sensitive tooth, those receiving corrective treatment (OR=3.2; 1.2-8.8) or extractions (OR=3.8; 1.3-11.2) were more likely to recover; (3) among NHB with tooth disease, those receiving corrective treatment (OR=2.3; 1.0-5.0) and extractions (OR=2.8; 1.2-6.5) were more likely to recover. CONCLUSION: There were racial differences in dental insurance, in the receipt of dental services and in the effectiveness of dental services in improving oral health-related quality of life.
OBJECTIVE: To describe racial differences in receipt of dental services and dental insurance; and to determine the effectiveness of specific dental services in facilitating recovery in symptom-specific and race-specific subgroups. STUDY DESIGN AND SETTING: Using a restricted cohort analytic method, Florida Dental Care Study prospective cohort data were used to quantify associations between dental service use and the quality of life measure, "recovery" from oral disadvantage due to functional limitation. RESULTS: Non-Hispanic Whites (NHW) were more likely to have a dental visit [odds ratio (OR); 95% confidence interval: 3.5; 2.2-5.3], corrective treatment (OR=2.1; 1.3-3.3), caps (OR=28.8; 6.6-126.4), and dental insurance coverage for caps (OR=2.9; 1.4-5.9). After adjusting for other covariates: (1) among NHW with severe gum disease, those receiving extractions were more likely to recover (OR=7.8; 1.0-59.1), but those receiving caps were less likely to recover (OR=0.1; 0.01-0.6); (2) among Non-Hispanic Blacks (NHB) with a sensitive tooth, those receiving corrective treatment (OR=3.2; 1.2-8.8) or extractions (OR=3.8; 1.3-11.2) were more likely to recover; (3) among NHB with tooth disease, those receiving corrective treatment (OR=2.3; 1.0-5.0) and extractions (OR=2.8; 1.2-6.5) were more likely to recover. CONCLUSION: There were racial differences in dental insurance, in the receipt of dental services and in the effectiveness of dental services in improving oral health-related quality of life.
Authors: Thomas A Arcury; Margaret R Savoca; Andrea M Anderson; Haiying Chen; Gregg H Gilbert; Ronny A Bell; Xiaoyan Leng; Teresa Reynolds; Sara A Quandt Journal: J Public Health Dent Date: 2012-04-26 Impact factor: 1.821
Authors: Dan P Zandberg; Sandy Liu; Olga Goloubeva; Robert Ord; Scott E Strome; Mohan Suntharalingam; Rodney Taylor; Robert E Morales; Jeffrey S Wolf; Ann Zimrin; Joshua E Lubek; Lisa M Schumaker; Kevin J Cullen Journal: Head Neck Date: 2015-06-30 Impact factor: 3.147
Authors: Thomas A Arcury; Ronny A Bell; Andrea M Anderson; Haiying Chen; Margaret R Savoca; Teresa Kohrman; Sara A Quandt Journal: J Public Health Dent Date: 2009 Impact factor: 1.821