Advances in Dental Research, Vol 11, Issue 2, 245-253
Copyright © 1997 by International & American Associations for Dental Research
Socio-behavioral determinants of oral hygiene practices among USA ethnic and age groups
PL Davidson,
TE Rams,
and
RM Andersen
Department of Health Services, School of Public Health, University of California, Los Angeles 90095, USA.
In this study, socio-behavioral determinants of oral hygiene practices were examined across several dentate ethnic and age groups. Oral hygiene scale scores were constructed from toothbrushing and dental floss frequencies self-reported by population-based samples of middle-aged (35-44 years) and older (65-74 years) dentate adults representing Baltimore African-American and White, San Antonio Hispanic and non-Hispanic White, and Navajo and Lakota Native American persons participating in the WHO International Collaborative Study of Oral Health Outcomes (ICS-II) survey. Female gender, education, certain oral health beliefs, household income, and the presence of a usual source of care were revealed with multivariate analysis to show a significant positive relationship with higher oral hygiene scale scores (indicating better personal oral hygiene practices). Other socio-behavioral variables exhibited a more varied, ethnic-specific pattern of association with oral hygiene scale scores.