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Journal ArticleDOI

From victim blaming to upstream action: tackling the social determinants of oral health inequalities

TLDR
A conceptual shift is needed away from this biomedical/behavioural 'downstream' approach, to one addressing the 'upstream' underlying social determinants of population oral health.
Abstract
The persistent and universal nature of oral health inequalities presents a significant challenge to oral health policy makers. Inequalities in oral health mirror those in general health. The universal social gradient in both general and oral health highlights the underlying influence of psychosocial, economic, environmental and political determinants. The dominant preventive approach in dentistry, i.e. narrowly focusing on changing the behaviours of high-risk individuals, has failed to effectively reduce oral health inequalities, and may indeed have increased the oral health equity gap. A conceptual shift is needed away from this biomedical/behavioural 'downstream' approach, to one addressing the 'upstream' underlying social determinants of population oral health. Failure to change our preventive approach is a dereliction of ethical and scientific integrity. A range of complementary public health actions may be implemented at local, national and international levels to promote sustainable oral health improvements and reduce inequalities. The aim of this article is to stimulate discussion and debate on the future development of oral health improvement strategies.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Influences on children's oral health: a conceptual model.

TL;DR: This conceptual model represents a starting point for thinking about children's oral health and incorporates many of the important breakthroughs by social epidemiologists over the past 25 years by including a broad range of genetic, social, and environmental risk factors.
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The global burden of periodontal disease: towards integration with chronic disease prevention and control.

TL;DR: The present report highlights the global burden of periodontal disease: the ultimate burden of Periodontal Disease (tooth loss), as well as signs of periodental disease, are described from World Health Organization (WHO) epidemiological data.
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Early Childhood Caries: Prevalence, Risk Factors, and Prevention.

TL;DR: The review will focus on the prevalence, risk factors, and preventive strategies and the management of ECC, one of the most common childhood diseases.
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Influence of family environment on children's oral health: a systematic review.

TL;DR: Current models and scientific evidence on the influence of parents' oral health behaviors on their children's dental caries are reviewed and special attention should be given to the entire family, concerning their lifestyle and oral health habits.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Interactions between stress, interleukin-1beta, interleukin-6 and cortisol in periodontally diseased patients.

TL;DR: No correlation between the immunological mediators (IL-1beta, IL-6), glucocorticoids (cortisol) and the registered stress values is found, however, the patients with untreated AGP showed signs of a pessimistic attitude to life, and an elevated IL- 6 level was recorded in the peripheral blood.
Journal ArticleDOI

The limitations of a 'high-risk' approach for the prevention of dental caries

TL;DR: The findings indicate the changes in caries experience observed occurred throughout populations and are not confined to subgroups, suggesting strategies limited to individuals 'at risk' would fail to deal with the majority of new lesions.
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Influence of exposure to fluoridated water on socioeconomic inequalities in children's caries experience.

TL;DR: Evaluated inequalities in children's dental caries experience among socioeconomic status (SES) groups and to investigate effects of exposure to fluoride in water on those inequalities, there was a significant multiplicative interaction whereby SES inequalities were lower among children exposed to fluoride.
Journal ArticleDOI

Relationship between diet and smoking--is the diet of smokers different?

TL;DR: Smokers have different nutrient and food intakes compared with past smokers or non-smokers, and current smokers had a lower body mass index than non- Smokers or past smokers despite their higher energy intakes.
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