Imbalances in the oral health workforce: a Canadian population-based study.

IF 2.7 3区 医学 Q2 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES BMC Health Services Research Pub Date : 2024-10-07 DOI:10.1186/s12913-024-11677-7
Neeru Gupta, Pablo Miah
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Abstract

Background: In Canada, a new federal public dental insurance plan, being phased in over 2022-2025, may help enhance financial access to dental services. However, as in many other countries, evidence is limited on the supply and distribution of human resources for oral health (HROH) to meet increasing population needs. This national observational study aimed to quantify occupational, geographical, institutional, and gender imbalances in the Canadian dental workforce to help inform benchmarking of HROH capacity for improving service coverage.

Methods: Sourcing microdata from the 2021 Canadian population census, we described workforce imbalances for three groups of postsecondary-qualified dental professionals: dentists, dental hygienists and therapists, and dental assistants. To assess geographic maldistribution relative to population, we linked the person-level census data to the geocoded Index of Remoteness for all inhabited communities. To assess gender-based inequities in the dental labour market, we performed Blinder-Oaxaca decompositions for examining differences in professional earnings of women and men.

Results: The census data tallied 3.4 active dentists aged 25-54 per 10,000 population, supported by an allied workforce of 1.7 dental hygienists/therapists and 1.6 dental assistants for every dentist. All three professional groups were overrepresented in heavily urbanized communities compared with more rural and remote areas. Almost all dental service providers worked in ambulatory care settings, except for male dental assistants. The dentistry workforce was found to have achieved gender parity numerically, but women dentists still earned 21% less on average than men, adjusting for other characteristics. Despite women representing 97% of dental hygienists/therapists, they earned 26% less on average than men, a significant difference that was largely unexplained in the decomposition analysis.

Conclusions: Accelerating universal coverage of oral healthcare services is increasingly advocated as an integral, but often neglected, component toward achieving the health-related Sustainable Development Goals. In the Canadian context of universal coverage for medical (but not dentistry) services, the oral health workforce was found to be demarcated by considerable geographic and gendered imbalances. More cross-nationally comparable research is needed to inform innovative approaches for equity-oriented HROH planning and financing, often critically overlooked in public policy for health systems strengthening.

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口腔卫生队伍的不平衡:一项基于加拿大人口的研究。
背景:在加拿大,一项新的联邦公共牙科保险计划将于 2022-2025 年分阶段实施,该计划可能有助于提高牙科服务的经济可及性。然而,与许多其他国家一样,有关口腔卫生人力资源(HROH)的供应和分配以满足日益增长的人口需求的证据十分有限。这项全国性观察研究旨在量化加拿大牙医队伍中的职业、地域、机构和性别不平衡现象,以帮助为提高服务覆盖率的口腔健康人力资源能力基准提供信息:我们从 2021 年加拿大人口普查中获取了微观数据,描述了三类获得中等教育后资格的牙科专业人员的劳动力失衡情况:牙医、牙科卫生员和治疗师以及牙科助理。为了评估相对于人口的地域分布失衡,我们将个人层面的普查数据与所有居住社区的地理编码偏远指数联系起来。为了评估牙科劳动力市场中基于性别的不公平现象,我们进行了布林德-瓦哈卡分解,以检查男女职业收入的差异:人口普查数据显示,每 10,000 人中有 3.4 名 25-54 岁的在职牙医,每 1 名牙医有 1.7 名牙科保健员/治疗师和 1.6 名牙科助理。与较偏远的农村地区相比,这三个专业群体在城市化程度较高的社区所占比例都较高。除男性牙科助理外,几乎所有牙科服务提供者都在门诊护理机构工作。研究发现,牙科从业人员在数量上实现了性别均等,但在调整了其他特征后,女牙医的平均收入仍比男性低 21%。尽管女性占牙科保健员/治疗师的 97%,但她们的平均收入比男性低 26%,这一显著差异在分解分析中基本无法解释:加快口腔医疗保健服务的普及是实现与健康相关的可持续发展目标的一个不可或缺的组成部分,但却常常被忽视。在加拿大,医疗(但非牙科)服务已实现全民覆盖,在此背景下,我们发现口腔卫生劳动力的地域和性别不平衡现象相当严重。需要开展更多跨国可比研究,为以公平为导向的口腔健康和生殖健康规划和融资的创新方法提供信息,而在加强卫生系统的公共政策中,这往往被严重忽视。
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来源期刊
BMC Health Services Research
BMC Health Services Research 医学-卫生保健
CiteScore
4.40
自引率
7.10%
发文量
1372
审稿时长
6 months
期刊介绍: BMC Health Services Research is an open access, peer-reviewed journal that considers articles on all aspects of health services research, including delivery of care, management of health services, assessment of healthcare needs, measurement of outcomes, allocation of healthcare resources, evaluation of different health markets and health services organizations, international comparative analysis of health systems, health economics and the impact of health policies and regulations.
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