| Literature DB >> 35401753 |
Cosmo Helder Ferreira da Silva1, Edmara Chaves Costa2, Ana Caroline Rocha de Melo Leite2, Vânia Barbosa do Nascimento1.
Abstract
This article characterizes the different socioeconomic and demographic contexts regarding the use and access to dental services by Brazilian and African students at a Brazilian university of international nature. This is a cross-sectional, analytical, observational study with a quantitative approach, with data produced by 350 students from a public university in the state of Ceará. Sociodemographic and economic factors, participation in educational activities, self-perception of oral health, and use of dental services by academics were analyzed. The results obtained indicated that of the university students participating in the study, 74.0% had already used dental services, of which 57.43% were Brazilian and 42.57% international. There was a significant association between being a Brazilian academic and having already used dental services, having an income less than or equal to the minimum wage, and having used the public dental service. The determination of the prevalence of use of dental services and the different contexts of university students can assist in planning future actions in oral health that prioritize groups of university students with greater difficulties in the use and access of these services.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35401753 PMCID: PMC8989569 DOI: 10.1155/2022/9362257
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Dent ISSN: 1687-8728
Description of sociodemographic, economic, and oral health-related aspects of only Brazilian and international academics who used dental services. Redenção e Acarape, CE, Brazil, 2019.
| Variables | N ( | % |
|---|---|---|
| Nationality | ||
| Brazilians | 148 | 57.43 |
| International | 109 | 42.57 |
| Sex | ||
| Female | 120 | 46.60 |
| Male | 137 | 53.30 |
| Age (years) | ||
| ≤25 | 187 | 73.04 |
| >25 | 70 | 26.96 |
| Place of residence | ||
| Urban area | 177 | 68.88 |
| Countryside | 80 | 31.12 |
| Color/race | ||
| White | 13 | 5.06 |
| Black | 137 | 53.31 |
| Brown, yellow, and indigenous | 107 | 41.63 |
| Family incomea | ||
| ≤1 MW | 163 | 63.42 |
| >1 MW | 94 | 36.58 |
| Participation in educational actions | ||
| Oral health | ||
| Yes | 147 | 57.20 |
| No | 110 | 42.80 |
| Type of dental service used | ||
| Public | 164 | 63.81 |
| Private | 93 | 36.19 |
| Last visit to the dentist | ||
| <1 year | 162 | 63.04 |
| ≥1–2 years | 95 | 36.96 |
| Perception of oral health | ||
| Great/good | 122 | 47.78 |
| Regular | 119 | 46.30 |
| Bad/terrible | 16 | 6.22 |
aMW–minimum wage (2019) which is R$ 998.00. Variable values based on the sample of 257 participants who used dental services.
Association between sociodemographic and economic factors, participation in educational activities, and perception of health and oral health by Brazilian and international academics. Redenção e Acarape, CE, Brazil, 2019.
| Variables | Participation in educational actions oral health | “Great/good” perception of oral health | Use of dental services | Types of dental servicesd | Last visit to the dentistd |
| |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sim | Não | Sim | Não | Sim | Não | Publ.b | Priv.c | <1 ano | ≥1 ano | ||
| Nationality | |||||||||||
| Brazilians | 98 (66.22) | 50 (33.78) | 74 (50.00) | 74 (50.00) | 1482 (100.00) | — | 94 (63.51) | 54 (36.49) | 1053 | 43 (29.05) |
|
| International | 73 (63.86) | 1291 (36.14) | 94 (46.53) | 108 (53.47) | 109 (53.96) | 93 (46.04) | 70 (64.22) | 39 (35.78) | 57 (52.29) | 52 (47.71) | |
| Sex | |||||||||||
| Female | 82 (55.03) | 67 (44.97) | 82 (55.03) | 67 (44.97) | 1206 (80.54) | 29 (19.46) | 76 (63.33) | 44 (36.67) | 78 (65.00) | 42 (35.00) |
|
| Male | 89 (44.28) | 1124 (55.72) | 86 (42.79) | 1155 (57.21) | 137 (68.16) | 64 (31.84) | 88 (64.23) | 49 (35.77) | 84 (61.31) | 53 (38.69) | |
| Age | |||||||||||
| ≤25 years | 122 (50.83) | 118 (49.17) | 126 (52.50) | 114 (47.50) | 1878 | 53 (22.08) | 118 (63.10) | 69 (36.90) | 114 (60.96) | 73 (39.04) |
|
| >25 years | 49 (44.55) | 61 (55.45) | 427 | 68 (61.82) | 70 (63.64) | 40 (36.36) | 46 (65.71) | 24 (34.29) | 48 (68.57) | 22 (31.43) | |
| Incomea | |||||||||||
| ≤1 MW | 114 (47.11) | 128 (52.89) | 112 (46.28) | 130 (53.89) | 163 (67.36) | 79 (32.64) | 11510 | 48 (29.45) | 107 (65.64) | 56 (34.36) |
|
| >1 MW | 57 (52.78) | 51 (47.22) | 56 (51.85) | 52 (48.15) | 94 (87.04) | 149 | 49 (52.13) | 45 (47.87) | 55 (58.51) | 39 (41.49) | |
| Place of residence | |||||||||||
| Countryside | 50 (50.00) | 50 (50.00) | 47 (47.00) (53.00) | 53 (53.00) | 80 (80.00) (20.00) | 20 (20.00) | 5811 | 22 (27.50) | 58 (72.50) | 22 (27.50) |
|
| Urban area | 121 (48.40) | 129 (51.60) | 121 (48.40) | 129 (51.60) | 177 (70.80) | 73 (29.20) | 106 (59.89) | 71 (40.11) | 10412 (58.76) | 73 (41.24) | |
| Participation in educational actions of oral health | |||||||||||
| — | — | 95 (55.56) | 76 (44.44) | 14714 (85.96) | 24 (14.04) | 10415 (70.75) | 43 (29.25) | 98 (66.67) | 49 (33.33) |
| |
| No | — | — | 73 (40.78) | 10613 (59.22) | 110 (61.45) | 69 (38.55) | 60 (54.55) | 50 (45.45) | 64 (58.18) | 46 (41.82) | |
| “Great/good” perception of oral health | |||||||||||
| Yes | 95 (56.55) | 73 (43.45) | — | — | 122 (72.62) (27.38) | 46 (27.38) | 83 (68.03) (31,97) | 39 (31.97) | 87 (71.31) | 3517 |
|
| No | 76 (41.76) | 10616 (58.24) | — | — | 135 (74.18) | 47 (25.82) | 81 (60.00 | 54 (40.00) | 75 (55.56) | 60 (44.44) | |
aMW-minimum wage (2019) which is R$ 998.00; bPubl.-public; cPriv.-private; ∗ Pearson's chi-square test; Fisher's exact test; 1p=0.001; 2p=0.001; 3p=0.002; 4p=0.046; 5p=0.023;6p=0.009; 7p=0.012; 8p=0.004; 9p=0.001; 10p=0.003; 11p=0.034; 12p=0.034; 13p=0.003; 14p=0.001; 15p=0.007;16p=0.005; and 17p=0.008. d Variable values based on a sample of 257 participants who used dental services.
Association between types, time and use of dental services, participation in educational activities, and self-perception of health and oral health by Brazilian and international academics. Redenção e Acarape, CE, Brazil, 2019.
| Variables | Participation in educational actions of oral health n (%) | “Great/good” perception of hygiene/oral health n (%) | Last visit to the dentist (years) n (%) |
| |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sim | Não | Sim | Não | <1 | ≥1 | ||
| Use of dental services | |||||||
| Yes | 147 (57.20) | 110 (42.80) | 122 (47.47) | 135 (57.20) | 162 (63.04) | 95 (36.96) |
|
| No | 241 | 69 (74.19) | 46 (49.46) | 47 (50.54) | — | — | |
| Type of services | |||||||
| Public | 1042 | 60 (36.59) | 83 (50.61) | 81 (49.39) | 102 (62.20) | 62 (37.80) |
|
| Private | 43 (46.24) | 50 (53.76) | 39 (41.94) | 54 (58.06) | 60 (64.52) | 33 (35.48) | |
Pearson's chi-square test; 1p=0.001 and 2p=0.007.