1. Education as a Predictor of Chronic Periodontitis: A Systematic Review with Meta-Analysis Population-Based Studies
- Author
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Sébastien Czernichow, Bechara El Halabi, Adrien Boillot, Hélène Rangé, George David Batty, and Philippe Bouchard
- Subjects
Bacterial Diseases ,Gerontology ,Non-Clinical Medicine ,Epidemiology ,Clinical Research Design ,Science ,Oral Medicine ,Population ,MEDLINE ,Infectious Disease Epidemiology ,Oral Diseases ,Risk Factors ,Humans ,Medicine ,education ,Biology ,Socioeconomic status ,Periodontitis ,education.field_of_study ,Health Care Policy ,Multidisciplinary ,Population Biology ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Chronic periodontitis ,Socioeconomic Aspects of Health ,United States ,Educational attainment ,Social Epidemiology ,Review Literature as Topic ,Infectious Diseases ,Systematic review ,Health Education and Awareness ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Dentistry ,Meta-analysis ,Chronic Periodontitis ,Periodontal Abscesses ,Educational Status ,Public Health ,Meta-Analyses ,business ,Research Article - Abstract
BackgroundThe impact of socioeconomic inequalities on health is well-documented. Despite the links of periodontal disease with cardiovascular diseases, adverse pregnancy outcomes and diabetes, no meta-analysis of socioeconomic variations in periodontal disease exists. This meta-analytic review was conducted to determine the extent to which education attainment influences risk of periodontitis in adults aged 35+ years in the general population.MethodsThe authors searched studies published until November 2010 using EMBASE and MEDLINE databases. References listed were then scrutinised, our own files were checked, and, finally, we contacted experts in the field. The authors included only general population-based studies conducted in adults aged 35 years and more. All articles were blind reviewed by two investigators. In the case of disagreement, a third investigator arbitrated. Using PRISMA statement, two reviewers independently extracted papers of interest.ResultsRelative to the higher education group, people with low education attainment experience a greater risk of periodontitis (OR: 1.86 [1.66-2.10]; pConclusionsIn the studies reviewed, low educational attainment was associated with an increased risk of periodontitis. Although this evidence should be cautiously interpreted due to methodological problems in selected studies, efforts to eliminate educational inequalities in periodontitis should focus on early life interventions.
- Published
- 2011