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Is Social Capital a Determinant of Oral Health among Older Adults? Findings from the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing

机译:社会资本是老年人口腔健康的决定因素吗?英文纵向老龄化研究的发现

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摘要

There are a number of studies linking social capital to oral health among older adults, although the evidence base mainly relies on cross-sectional study designs. The possibility of reverse causality is seldom discussed, even though oral health problems could potentially lead to lower social participation. Furthermore, few studies clearly distinguish between the effects of different dimensions of social capital on oral health. The objective of the study was to examine the longitudinal associations between individual social capital and oral health among older adults. We analyzed longitudinal data from the 3rd and 5th waves of the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing (ELSA). Structural social capital was operationalized using measures of social participation, and volunteering. Number of close ties and perceived emotional support comprised the functional dimension of social capital. Oral health measures were having no natural teeth (edentate vs. dentate), self-rated oral health and oral health-related quality of life. Time-lag and autoregressive models were used to explore the longitudinal associations between social capital and oral health. We imputed all missing data, using multivariate imputation by chained equations. We found evidence of bi-directional longitudinal associations between self-rated oral health, volunteering and functional social capital. Functional social capital was a strong predictor of change in oral health-related quality of life – the adjusted odds ratio of reporting poor oral health-related quality of life was 1.75 (1.33–2.30) for older adults with low vs. high social support. However in the reverse direction, poor oral health-related quality of life was not associated with changes in social capital. This suggests that oral health may not be a determinant of social capital. In conclusion, social capital may be a determinant of subjective oral health among older adults rather than edentulousness, despite many cross-sectional studies on the latter.
机译:尽管证据基础主要依赖于横断面研究设计,但仍有许多研究将社会资本与老年人的口腔健康联系起来。即使口腔健康问题有可能导致社会参与度降低,也很少讨论反向因果关系的可能性。此外,很少有研究明确区分社会资本的不同方面对口腔健康的影响。该研究的目的是检验老年人的个人社会资本与口腔健康之间的纵向联系。我们分析了英语纵向老龄化研究(ELSA)中第3 rd 和第5 波的纵向数据。结构性社会资本通过社会参与和志愿服务的手段得以运作。亲密关系的数量和感知的情感支持构成了社会资本的功能维度。口腔健康指标没有天然牙齿(无牙牙齿),自我评估的口腔健康以及与口腔健康相关的生活质量。时滞和自回归模型用于探讨社会资本与口腔健康之间的纵向联系。我们使用链式方程的多元插补估算了所有丢失的数据。我们发现自测口腔健康,志愿服务和功能性社会资本之间存在双向纵向关联的证据。功能性社会资本是口腔健康相关生活质量变化的有力预测指标–社会支持相对较低或较高的老年人报告的口腔健康相关生活质量较差的调整后优势比为1.75(1.33–2.30)。但是,相反的情况是,与口腔健康相关的不良生活质量与社会资本的变化无关。这表明口腔健康可能不是社会资本的决定因素。总之,尽管有许多横断面研究,但社会资本可能是老年人主观口腔健康的决定因素,而不是无牙症。

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