Dental Caries and Preventive Dental Visits Among Children in the U.S.: The Impact of Race/Ethnicity and Immigration

Huabin Luo PhD , Bei Wu PhD , Yanyan Wu PhD , Mark E. Moss DDS, PhD
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Abstract

Introduction

National data on dental caries and dental service use among immigrant children in U.S. are limited. It is not known whether race/ethnicity would interact with immigration status to increase these disparities. Using a nationally representative sample, this study assessed the interaction effects of immigrant generation status and race/ethnicity on dental caries and dental visits among children in the U.S.

Methods

Data were from the 2020 and 2021 National Survey of Children's Health. All data were self-reported by parents/guardians. The 2 outcomes were (1) dental caries (yes/no) in the past 12 months and (2) preventive dental visits (yes/no) in the past 12 months. Racial/ethnic groups included non-Hispanic White, Black, Hispanics, and Asian Americans. The analytical sample included 66,167 children aged 2–17 years, including 1,243 first-generation immigrant children; 11,017 second-generation immigrant children; and 53,907 nonimmigrant children. Study authors ran separate multiple logistic regression models for the 2 outcome variables. All analyses accounted for the survey design of National Survey of Children's Health.

Results

First-generation immigrant children were more likely to have dental caries than nonimmigrant children (AOR=1.44). The interaction of race/ethnicity and immigrant generation status was significant (p=0.04) in the preventive dental visits model, indicating increased challenges in getting dental visits among minority immigrant children in comparison with that among non-Hispanic White immigrant children, especially among first-generation immigrant children of Asian Americans (AOR=0.41) and non-Hispanic Black immigrant children (AOR=0.37).

Conclusions

First-generation immigrant children were less likely to see a dentist and more likely to have dental caries than nonimmigrants. Moreover, first-generation immigrant children from minority racial/ethnic groups were the least likely to seek dental services. To further reduce disparities in oral health and dental use among children in the U.S., culturally sensitive health promotion is warranted to improve oral health literacy and reduce barriers to dental care for immigrants, especially immigrant children of the minority groups.

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美国儿童的龋齿和牙科预防就诊情况:种族/族裔和移民的影响
导言:有关美国移民儿童龋齿和牙科服务使用情况的全国性数据十分有限。目前尚不清楚种族/族裔是否会与移民身份相互作用,从而增加这些差异。本研究使用具有全国代表性的样本,评估了移民世代身份和种族/族裔对美国儿童龋齿和牙科就诊的交互影响。方法数据来自 2020 年和 2021 年全国儿童健康调查。所有数据均由家长/监护人自行报告。两个结果分别是:(1)过去 12 个月的龋齿情况(是/否);(2)过去 12 个月的预防性牙科就诊情况(是/否)。种族/族裔群体包括非西班牙裔白人、黑人、西班牙裔和亚裔美国人。分析样本包括 66,167 名 2-17 岁的儿童,其中第一代移民儿童 1,243 名;第二代移民儿童 11,017 名;非移民儿童 53,907 名。研究作者对两个结果变量分别建立了多元逻辑回归模型。结果第一代移民儿童比非移民儿童更容易患龋齿(AOR=1.44)。在预防性牙科就诊模型中,种族/族裔与移民世代状况的交互作用显著(p=0.04),表明与非西班牙裔白人移民儿童相比,少数民族移民儿童在接受牙科就诊方面面临更多挑战,尤其是第一代美国亚裔移民儿童(AOR=0.41)和非西班牙裔黑人移民儿童(AOR=0.37)。此外,来自少数种族/族裔群体的第一代移民儿童寻求牙科服务的可能性最小。为了进一步缩小美国儿童在口腔健康和牙科使用方面的差距,有必要开展具有文化敏感性的健康促进活动,以提高移民,尤其是少数族裔移民儿童的口腔健康素养,减少他们获得牙科保健的障碍。
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AJPM focus
AJPM focus Health, Public Health and Health Policy
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