RESUMO
OBJECTIVES: To explore the pathways through which the socioeconomic inequalities may influence gingival bleeding in adolescents, assessing the direct and indirect effects of material and psychosocial variables. METHODS: This cohort study followed a multistage, random sample of 1134 12-year-old adolescents from 20 public schools of Santa Maria, a city in southern Brazil. The percentage of teeth with gingival bleeding was recorded according to the Community Periodontal Index criteria (scored as healthy or bleeding) at baseline and at 2-year follow-up. Biological (dental plaque, caries, and dental crowding), material (socioeconomic position [SEP] operationalized as family income and parents' education), psychosocial (parents' religiosity, self-rated health, and happiness) and behavioural (use of dental service by adolescents) factors were collected at baseline. Structural equation modelling (SEM) was guided by the adapted Commission on the Social Determinants of Health model linking material, psychosocial, biological, and behaviour variables to health. The SEM was employed to estimate standardized direct, indirect, and total effects of material and psychosocial factors on gingival bleeding at follow-up. RESULTS: A total of 770 14-year-old adolescents were reassessed (follow-up rate of 68%). The lower SEP at baseline had a higher direct effect (standard coefficient [SC] = -0.17, P < 0.01) than a mediated effect on percentage of teeth with gingival bleeding at 2-year follow-up. The lower indirect effect (SC = -0.06, P < 0.01) from SEP to gingival bleeding at follow-up ran through biological factors-dental plaque (baseline and follow-up) and gingival bleeding at baseline. The lower religiosity of the parents as a psychosocial aspect had only a small direct effect (SC = -0.10, P = 0.03) on gingival bleeding at follow-up. CONCLUSIONS: Material factors such as SEP contributed most to explanations on inequalities in adolescents' periodontal health because of their higher direct effect and additional shared (indirect) effect (through biological factors) on gingival bleeding. Religious practice as a psychosocial factor only explained part of percentage of teeth with gingival bleeding at follow-up.
Assuntos
Hemorragia Gengival/epidemiologia , Saúde Bucal , Adolescente , Brasil , Estudos de Coortes , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Fatores SocioeconômicosRESUMO
Abstract Understanding how the social world affects humans´ health by "getting under the skin" and penetrating the cells, organs and physiological systems of the body is a key tenet in public health research. Here, we propose the idea that socioeconomic position (SEP) can be biologically embodied, potentially leading to the production of health inequalities in oral health across population groups. Recent studies show that being exposed to chronic stress across the life course could impact our health. Allostatic load (AL) is a composite biological measure of overall physiological wear-and-tear that could allow a better understanding of the potential biological pathways playing a role in the construction of the social gradient in adult health. However, to use biological measures to better understand the mechanisms that construct health inequalities in oral health has not been tested systematically. The purposes of this New Perspective is to discuss the value of using composite biological markers, such as AL, to analyze oral health. This can allow a better understanding of the mechanisms leading to health inequalities in oral health, and add some valuable information for implementing health interventions.
Resumen Comprender cómo el mundo social afecta la salud de los seres humanos "penetrando bajo la piel" e introduciéndose dentro de las células, los órganos y los sistemas fisiológicos del cuerpo, es un principio clave en la investigación en salud pública. Aquí, proponemos la idea que la posición socioeconómica puede incorporarse biológicamente, lo que puede conducir a la producción de inequidades sociales en salud entre diferentes grupos de población. Estudios recientes muestran que estar expuesto al estrés crónico a lo largo de la vida podría afectar nuestra salud. La carga alostática es una medida biológica compuesta del desgaste fisiológico global del cuerpo que podría permitir una mejor comprensión de las posibles vías biológicas que desempeñan un papel en la construcción del gradiente social en la salud del adulto. Sin embargo, el uso de medidas biológicas para comprender mejor los mecanismos que construyen las inequidades sociales en salud oral, no se ha probado sistemáticamente. El propósito de este boletín de New Perspective es analizar el valor del uso de marcadores biológicos compuestos, como la carga alostática, para analizar la salud oral. Esto puede permitir una mejor comprensión de los mecanismos que conducen a las inequidades sociales en salud oral, y así agregar información valiosa para implementar de manera más adecuada las intervenciones en salud.