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Association between the longest job and oral health: Japan Gerontological Evaluation Study project cross-sectional study

Inequality in oral health is a major challenge. Oral diseases and their risk factors accumulate throughout life. The objective of this cross-sectional study was to examine the association of longest job with oral health status and oral health behavior among older Japanese. Subjects were a total of 2...

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Published in:BMC oral health 2014-10, Vol.14 (1), p.130-130, Article 130
Main Authors: Yamamoto, Tatsuo, Kondo, Katsunori, Aida, Jun, Fuchida, Shinya, Hirata, Yukio
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description Inequality in oral health is a major challenge. Oral diseases and their risk factors accumulate throughout life. The objective of this cross-sectional study was to examine the association of longest job with oral health status and oral health behavior among older Japanese. Subjects were a total of 23,191 (11,310 males and 11,881 females) community-dwelling individuals aged 65 or over, living independently and able to perform daily activities from 30 municipalities across Japan. The outcome variables were oral health status (number of teeth, use of denture or bridge and subjective oral health status) and oral health behavior (dental visit for treatment and use of interdental brush or dental floss). The longest job was used as an explanatory variable. Age, educational attainment, equivalent income, and densities of dentists and population in municipalities were used as covariates. Two-level (first level: individual, second level: municipality) multilevel Poisson regression analyses were performed for each sex. Multilevel Poisson regression analyses showed that all variables of oral health status and oral health behavior were significantly associated with longest job after adjusting for all covariates except denture/bridge use and dental visit for females. People whose longest jobs were sales/service, skilled/labor, agriculture/forestry/fishery or others, or who had no occupation were more likely to have poor oral health status and oral health behavior compared to those whose longest jobs were professional/technical. The longest job may be one of the major determinants of oral health status and oral health behavior in Japanese older people.
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source Open Access: PubMed Central; ProQuest - Publicly Available Content Database
subjects Age Factors
Aged
Cohort Studies
Cross-Sectional Studies
Dental Care - statistics & numerical data
Dental Devices, Home Care - statistics & numerical data
Dentistry
Dentists - supply & distribution
Dentition
Dentures - statistics & numerical data
Educational Status
Employment
Female
Health Behavior
Health Status
Humans
Income
Independent Living
Japan
Male
Occupations - classification
Oral Health
Population Density
Prospective Studies
Self Concept
Sex Factors
Social Class
Toothbrushing - instrumentation
title Association between the longest job and oral health: Japan Gerontological Evaluation Study project cross-sectional study
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