Socioeconomic vulnerability and access to community water fluoridation in Washington

IF 3.1 2区 医学 Q1 DENTISTRY, ORAL SURGERY & MEDICINE
Donald L. Chi DDS, PhD, Shelley Guinn RDH, BSDH, MPH, Mary Ellen Shands RN, MN, Deeksha Nemawarkar BDS, MPH, Courtney M. Hill MS, Miriam Mayhle BA, Thinh T. Do BS, Sophie Li, Shraddha Panchal BDS, RDA
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background

The aim of the authors was to determine whether socioeconomic vulnerability is associated with community water fluoridation (CWF).

Methods

The authors used US Census Bureau data to create 4 county-level vulnerability markers (percentages non-White, Hispanic or Latino, below the federal poverty threshold, education below high school), obtained county-level CWF data from the Washington State Department of Health, and evaluated associations using Spearman rank correlation coefficient and the Kruskal-Wallis rank sum test. The authors then interviewed 122 community members in Washington (December 2022-March 2023) and analyzed the interview data inductively.

Results

A higher percentage of non-White people at the county level was associated with a significantly higher level of CWF (Spearman rank correlation coefficient, 0.55; 95% CI, 0.29 to 0.82; P < .001), whereas county-level poverty was associated with significantly lower CWF (Spearman rank correlation coefficient, −0.36; 95% CI, −0.70 to −0.03; P = .02). High school completion was not associated with county-level CWF. Significantly larger proportions of Hispanics and Latinos lived in counties with higher CWF (P < .05). From the interviews, more participants thought tap water was healthy than unhealthy, but 41% had mixed feelings. Similarly, more participants thought CWF was acceptable than unacceptable, with 35% reporting mixed feelings. Negative views about tap water and CWF were more common among non-White participants.

Conclusions

People in racially and ethnically diverse communities in Washington appear to have greater access to CWF, whereas those in lower-income communities have poorer access.

Practical Implications

CWF is an important population-level strategy to prevent caries. Additional work is needed to improve access to CWF, especially for people from low-income communities.

华盛顿州的社会经济脆弱性与社区氟化水的获取。
背景作者的目的是确定社会经济脆弱性是否与社区水氟化(CWF)有关:作者使用美国人口普查局的数据创建了 4 个县级脆弱性标记(非白人、西班牙裔或拉丁裔、低于联邦贫困线、高中以下教育程度),从华盛顿州卫生部获得了县级 CWF 数据,并使用 Spearman 等级相关系数和 Kruskal-Wallis 秩和检验评估了相关性。作者随后采访了华盛顿州的 122 名社区成员(2022 年 12 月至 2023 年 3 月),并对采访数据进行了归纳分析:县级非白人比例越高,CWF 水平越高(Spearman 等级相关系数,0.55;95% CI,0.29 至 0.82;P < .001),而县级贫困与 CWF 水平显著降低相关(Spearman 等级相关系数,-0.36;95% CI,-0.70 至 -0.03;P = .02)。高中毕业与县级 CWF 无关。居住在 CWF 较高的县的西班牙裔和拉丁裔比例明显更高(P < .05)。从访谈结果来看,认为自来水健康的参与者多于认为自来水不健康的,但也有 41% 的人持不同看法。同样,认为化石燃料可接受的人多于不可接受的人,35% 的人表示喜忧参半。非白人参与者对自来水和化石燃料的负面看法更为普遍:华盛顿州种族和民族多元化社区的居民似乎更容易获得化石燃料,而低收入社区的居民则更难获得化石燃料:实际意义:社区儿童福利是一项重要的人群防龋策略。还需要做更多的工作来改善获得 CWF 的机会,尤其是低收入社区的人们。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of the American Dental Association
Journal of the American Dental Association 医学-牙科与口腔外科
CiteScore
5.30
自引率
10.30%
发文量
221
审稿时长
34 days
期刊介绍: There is not a single source or solution to help dentists in their quest for lifelong learning, improving dental practice, and dental well-being. JADA+, along with The Journal of the American Dental Association, is striving to do just that, bringing together practical content covering dentistry topics and procedures to help dentists—both general dentists and specialists—provide better patient care and improve oral health and well-being. This is a work in progress; as we add more content, covering more topics of interest, it will continue to expand, becoming an ever-more essential source of oral health knowledge.
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