Background: The aim of this study was to investigate the association between early-life family income and dental pain experience from childhood to early adulthood. Methods: Data came from a 14-year prospective study (1991/1992–2005/2006) carried out in South Australia, which included children and adolescents aged 4–17 years (N = 9875) at baseline. The outcome was dental pain experience obtained at baseline, 14 years later in adulthood and at a middle point of time. The main explanatory variable was early-life family income collected at baseline. Results: The prevalence of dental pain was 22.8% at baseline, 19.3% at ‘middle time’ and 39.3% at follow up. The proportion of people classified as ‘poor’ at baseline was 27.7%. Being poor early in life was significantly associated with dental pain at 14-year follow up (odds ratio = 1.45; 95% confidence interval = 1.27–1.66). Conclusions: Early-life relative poverty is associated with more frequent dental pain across the 14-year follow up and may be a key exposure variable for later dental conditions.
CITATION STYLE
Ghorbani, Z., Peres, M. A., Liu, P., Mejia, G. C., Armfield, J. M., & Peres, K. G. (2017). Does early-life family income influence later dental pain experience? A prospective 14-year study. Australian Dental Journal, 62(4), 493–499. https://doi.org/10.1111/adj.12531
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