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Oral health inequalities among Indigenous and non-Indigenous children.
Jamieson L*, Roberts-Thomson K, Armfield J
Objective: To describe oral health inequalities among
Indigenous and non-Indigenous children in the Northern Territory of Australia using an area-based measure of
socio-economic status (SES). Methods: Data were obtained from Indigenous and non-Indigenous 4-13-year-old children
enrolled in the Northern Territory School Dental Service in 2002-2003. The Socio-Economic Indices For Areas
(SEIFA) were used to determine socio-economic relationships with dental disease experience. Results: Some 12,584
children were examined, 35.1 percent of whom were Indigenous. Across all age-groups, socially-disadvantaged
Indigenous children experienced higher mean dmft and DMFT levels than their similarly-aged, similarly-disadvantaged
non-Indigenous counterparts. Indigenous children aged 5-years had almost four times the dmft of their non-Indigenous
counterparts in the same disadvantage category (P<0.05), while Indigenous children aged 10-years had almost five
times the DMFT of similarly disadvantaged non-Indigenous children (P<0.05). A distinct social gradient was apparent
among Indigenous and non-Indigenous children respectively whereby those with the highest dmft/DMFT levels were in
the most disadvantaged SES category and those least disadvantaged had the lowest dmft/DMFT levels. In most
age-groups, Indigenous children who were least disadvantaged had worse oral health than the most disadvantaged
non-Indigenous children. Conclusions: The findings suggest that Indigenous status and SES have strong oral health
outcome correlations but are not mutually dependent, that is, Indigenous status influences oral health outcomes
irrespective of social disadvantage. From a health policy perspective, greater oral health gains may be possible by
concentrating public health and clinical effort among all Indigenous children irrespective of SES status.
Presented at the 45th Annual Meeting of the ANZ Division of the IADR,
25-28 September 2005, Queenstown, New Zealand
Note: * indicates presenter
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