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Erschienen in: International Journal for Equity in Health 1/2016

Open Access 01.12.2016 | Research

Socioeconomic inequality in oral health behavior in Iranian children and adolescents by the Oaxaca-Blinder decomposition method: the CASPIAN- IV study

verfasst von: Saeid Safiri, Roya Kelishadi, Ramin Heshmat, Ali Rahimi, Shirin Djalalinia, Anoosheh Ghasemian, Ali Sheidaei, Mohammad Esmaeil Motlagh, Gelayol Ardalan, Morteza Mansourian, Hamid Asayesh, Mahdi Sepidarkish, Mostafa Qorbani

Erschienen in: International Journal for Equity in Health | Ausgabe 1/2016

Abstract

Background

The present study set to describe the socioeconomic inequality associated with oral hygiene behavior among Iranian pediatric population.

Methods

A representative sample of 13486 school students aged 6–18 years was selected through multistage random cluster sampling method from urban and rural areas of 30 provinces in Iran. Principle Component Analyses (PCA) correlated variables summarized as socioeconomic status (SES). Association of independent variables with tooth brushing was assessed through logistic regression analysis. Decomposition of the gap in tooth brushing between the first and fifth SES quintiles was assessed using the counterfactual decomposition technique. To assess the relation between tooth brushing and each socioeconomic category, Concentration Index (C) and the slope index of inequality (SII) were used, representing the linear regression coefficient.

Results

The participation rate was 90.6 % (50.7 % boys and 75.6 % urban inhabitants). The mean age of participants was 12.47 ± 3.36 years. The frequency of tooth brushing increased across SES quintiles, prevalence of tooth brushing between the first and fifth quintile, under 20 % difference, increased from 58.22 (95 % CI: 56.24,60.20) to 78.61 (95 % CI: 77.00,80.24). Only 3 % of the difference is explained by the factors considered in the study, and 17 % remained unknown. Residence area, family size, and smoking status made a significant contribution to the gap between the first and last SE groups. Residence area [ −2.01 (95 % CI: −3.46, −0.55)] was along the maximum levels of gaps between SE categories.

Conclusions

The findings revealed a socio-economic inequality in oral health behavior in Iranian children and adolescents. Also, factors influencing oral health are addressed to develop and implement complementary public health actions.
Abkürzungen
CASPIAN
Childhood and Adolescence Surveillance and Prevention of Adult Non-communicable Disease
CI
Confidence interval
OR
Odds ratio
PCA
Principle component analyses
SES
Socioeconomic status
SII
Slope index of inequality
WHO
World Health Organization

Background

Through widespread health measures, families with lower socioeconomic status (SES) have higher rates of diseases and disabilities such as cardiovascular disease, cancer, diabetes, and birth defects [13]. These health inequalities originate from different factors such as health behavior since lower socioeconomic individuals have possibly more unhealthy behaviors [13].
According to Surgeon General’s Report on Oral Health [4], there are disparities in oral health, where people with lower SES are more susceptible to oral diseases such as dental caries, periodontal disease, and oral cancer. Studies indicate significant increase in the differences in the oral health status between individuals with high and low SES [5]. Also, children with different SES have various forms of food consumption and oral health practices such as tooth brushing. These differences could be considered as mediators of the relationship between SES and oral health, which are essential to address the oral health inequality and improvement of children [6].
There are limited evidence-based studies on measuring oral health inequalities. Most studies have only evaluated the association between lower SES and caries, without assessing the reason for such associations [711]. Therefore, it is very little known about specific oral hygiene behaviors such as tooth brushing in families with different SES [12, 13]. According to a national study, Iran has equal or higher oral health habits compared with other countries specially in tooth brushing; the frequency was found more in girls than boys and more in urban areas than rural areas [14].
There is a strong need for studies to evaluate the relationship between SES and oral health for identifying particular behavioral factors associated with SES, contributing to the risk of dental caries. Thus, the present study set to describe the socioeconomic inequality associated with oral hygiene behavior among children and adolescents populations in Iran. It is believed that the results may help to support effective evidence-based policies and interventions to improve oral health status in Iran.

Methods

The findings are derived from the results of fourth round of comprehensive national survey of a school-based surveillance system entitled “Childhood and Adolescence Surveillance and Prevention of Adult Non-communicable Disease” (CASPIAN-IV) study (2011–2012). The details of the study has been previously described [15], here, essentials are pointed in brief.

Study population

To assess the socioeconomic inequality in oral health behavior of Iranian children and adolescents, the data of 13,486 students aged 6–18 years were used, selected through multistage cluster sampling method from rural and urban areas of 30 provinces of Iran.
Eligible schools for the study were stratified according to information bank of Ministry of Education through multistage cluster sampling method (48 clusters of 10 students in each province). Stratification was performed according to school grade (elementary, middle-, and high school) and residence area (urban, rural). Three targeted age groups were; 6–9.9, 10–13.9, and 14–18 years. Considering the potential probability for loss of samples and confound data, the sample reached 14,880. Participants who had complete data were included in the study.

Data gathering

A trained team of expert health care providers conducted all examinations and inquiry processes under standard protocols and calibrated instruments. Following the World Health Organization (WHO), global school-based student health survey (GHSH) instructions, the data were recorded in checklists, and validated questionnaires were completed for all participants. To assess the highest data quality in multi-center data gathering, all different levels of quality assurance were exactly supervised by Data and Safety Monitoring Board [15].

Definition of terms

  • Oral health behaviors: Oral health behaviors refer to tooth brushing.
  • Demographic information: Demographic information includes the age, sex, residence area, birth order, family based characteristics, family history of chronic diseases (hypertension, dyslipidemia, diabetes, and obesity), parental level of education, possessing a family private car, and type of home, completed for all participants through an interview with parents or children.
  • Socioeconomic status (SES): To determine the SES of participants, the methodology approved previously in the Progress in the International Reading Literacy Study (PIRLS) for Iran was used. Using principle component analysis (PCA), parents’ education, parents’ job, possessing private car, school type (public/private), type of home (private/rented), and having a personal computer variables were summarized under one main component, categorized into five quintiles. Through an ascending grade, the first quintile was defined as the “lowest SES” and the fifth quintile as the “highest SES” groups.
  • Smoking status: Smoking was categorized into three groups; active, passive, and smoking exposure. A person who smoked at least one cigarette a day (seven cigarettes per week) was considered an active smoker. Students who reported smoker people in their living environment were considered passive smokers. Smoking exposure was defined as active or passive smoking or both.
  • Tooth brushing: General characteristics of the participants were categorized under the categories of self-reported frequency of tooth brushing including more than once a day, once a day, once a week, rarely, and never [14, 16]. For statistical analysis, tooth brushing was considered as a binary variable; more than once a day and once a day were considered as positive tooth brushing behaviors, and other options were analyzed as negative tooth brushing behaviors. More details regarding the variables’ scale are given in Appendix.

Ethical concerns

The study protocol was reviewed and approved by Ethics Committees of Tehran University of Medical Sciences and Isfahan University of Medical Sciences. Participation for the invited was voluntary. After compete explaining the study aims and protocols, written consent and verbal assent were obtained from the students.

Statistical analysis

To provide practical information for better health planning, to study the differences between the groups, to determine practical wage differences between two groups explained by group differences in productivity characteristics, and also to clear a residual part that cannot be accounted by such differences in wage determinants, Blinder–Oaxaca decomposition was used for linear regression models [1719]. This method is based on two regression models, fitted separately for the two population groups (in this study, high and low-economic groups) [20].
$$ \mathrm{Y}\mathrm{H} = {\upbeta \mathrm{X}}_{\mathrm{H}} + {\upvarepsilon}_{\mathrm{H}} $$
(1)
$$ \mathrm{YL} = {\upbeta \mathrm{X}}_{\mathrm{L}} + {\upvarepsilon}_{\mathrm{L}} $$
(2)
Y is the outcome variable; β is the coefficient including the intercept; X is the explanatory variable, and ε is the error. The gap between the two groups is:
$$ {\overline{\mathrm{y}}}_{\mathrm{H}} - {\overline{\mathrm{y}}}_{\mathrm{L}} = \left({\overline{\mathrm{X}}}_{\mathrm{H}}-{\overline{\mathrm{X}}}_{\mathrm{L}}\right){\upbeta}_{\mathrm{H}}+{\overline{\mathrm{X}}}_{\mathrm{L}}\left({\upbeta}_{\mathrm{H}}-{\upbeta}_{\mathrm{L}}\right) $$
(3)
and
$$ {\overline{\mathrm{y}}}_{\mathrm{L}} - {\overline{\mathrm{y}}}_{\mathrm{H}} = \left({\overline{\mathrm{X}}}_{\mathrm{H}}-{\overline{\mathrm{X}}}_{\mathrm{L}}\right){\upbeta}_{\mathrm{L}}+{\overline{\mathrm{X}}}_{\mathrm{H}}\left({\upbeta}_{\mathrm{H}}-{\upbeta}_{\mathrm{L}}\right) $$
(4)
The first part of the right hand side of the above equations is the observable difference in the variables in the two groups (the endowment or explained component), and the second part is related to the differences in the variable coefficients in the two groups (the coefficient or unexplained component). This technique divides the gap between the mean values of an outcome into two components. The “explained or endowment” component arises because of differences in the groups’ characteristics, such as differences in region or family size. An “unexplained or coefficient” component is attributed to different influences of these characteristics in each group [21]. To perform the decomposition, a logistic regression model was constructed with independent variables in each economic group to determine the regression coefficients (β) as the main effect and its interaction with other independent variables.
Using Principle Component Analyses (PCA), variables including parents’ education, parents’ job, possessing private car, school type (public/private), type of home (private/rented), and having personal computer are summarized as SES [22, 23]. Association of independent variables with tooth brushing is assessed through logistic regression analysis and presented by crude and adjusted OR (95 % CI). Decomposition of the gap in tooth brushing between the first and fifth quintiles of SES was evaluated using the counterfactual decomposition technique which is widely used to study mean outcome differences between groups [18, 24, 25].
To investigate the association of tooth brushing in each socioeconomic category, on the basis of the distribution of tooth brushing versus the distribution of SES, Concentration Index (C) was used, showing how SES inequality in some health outcome variables exists and how distributed at one point [26, 27]. The Slope Index of Inequality (SII) represented the linear regression coefficient; it reveals the relation between the levels of frequency of tooth brushing in each socioeconomic category hierarchical ranking. Hence, targeted variable is created from a series of values according to different SES categories along with a range, and all individuals in population changes are considered along with different SES categories [27, 28]. Statistical measures were assessed using survey data analysis methods in the Stata version 11.1 (Stata Corporation, College Station, TX, USA). Using the method described by Jann [29], the Oaxaca command was ran in version 10 of the Stata software (Stata Corporation, College Station, Texas). P < 0.05 was considered as statistically significant.

Results

From 14880 invited students, 13486 participants completed all required data (participation rate: 90.6 %). The average age range was 12.47 ± 3.36 years, without any significant difference between girls and boys. There were 6640 (49.2 %) girls and 75.6 % urban area residents.
The prevalence of tooth brushing had an ascending trend according to socioeconomic quintiles (Fig. 1).
Results revealed that through an increasing pattern of tooth brushing prevalence along with the SES quintiles, tooth brushing prevalence between the first and fifth quintile, under 20 % difference, increased from 58.22 (95 % CI: 56.24, 60.20) to 78.61 (95 % CI: 77.00, 80.24). SII presented an adverse association between SES and oral health-related behaviors (coefficient: −0.24 (95 % CI: −0.34, −0.14)). Moreover, based on the estimated concentration index of 0.06 (SD = 0.003), poor oral health-related behaviors were most probable in low socioeconomic levels. Table 1 shows SES inequality in tooth brushing prevalence in Iranian children and adolescents.
Table 1
Socioeconomic inequality in teeth brushing prevalence in Iranian children and adolescents: the CASPIAN IV study
Outcome
Q1
Prevalence [95 % CI]
Q2
Prevalence [95 % CI]
Q3
Prevalence [95 % CI]
Q4
Prevalence [95 % CI]
Q5
Prevalence [95 % CI]
Total
Prevalence [95 % CI]
SII
[95 % CI]
C (SD)
Tooth brushing
58.22 (56.24,60.20)
63.45 (61.26,65.59)
65.54 (63.43,67.58)
69.83 (67.6,71.97)
78.61 (77.00,80.24)
66.99 (65.72,68.24)
−0.24 (−0.34,−0.14)
0.06 (0.003)
CI confidence interval, Q quantile, SII slope index of inequality, C concentration index, SD standard deviation
Considering the analysis of independent variables, individuals in quintile 5 families had significantly higher tooth brushing prevalence compared with those counterparts in quintile 1 (OR: 2.71; 95 % CI: 2.39, 3.07). Participants with higher order of birth (third and more), larger family size (>4), compared with their counterparts, had less prevalence of oral health behaviors (24 % and 22 %, respectively).
As Also, living in rural areas was adversely associated with less prevalence of tooth brushing (OR:0.67; 95 % CI: 0.61, 0.72). And the prevalence of tooth brushing was 2.31 (95 % CI: 2.15, 2.49) times more in girls. There was a less chance of increase in tooth brushing with increase of population age (OR: 1.04; 95 % CI: 1.02, 1.05). All categories of smoking status increased the chance of poor oral health behaviors’ (P for trend < 0.001) (Table 2).
Table 2
Association of independent variables and teeth brushing in logistic regression analysis
Variables
Crude OR (95 % CI)
P-value
Adjusted OR (95 % CI)
P-value
SES (Q1)
 Q2
1.28 (1.14, 1.43)
<0.001
1.19 (1.05,1.35)
< 0.001
 Q3
1.40 (1.25,1.57)
< 0.001
1.30 (1.14,1.48)
< 0.001
 Q4
1.71 (1.52,1.92)
<0.001
1.53 (1.32,1.78)
<0.001
 Q5
2.71 (2.39, 3.07)
< 0.001
2.45 (2.08,2.90)
< 0.001
Birth order (first)
 Second
0.90 (0.82,0.98)
0.03
0.97 (0.88,1.08)
0.69
 Third
0.74 (0.66,0.82)
<0.001
0.89 (0.78,1.01)
0.09
 Fourth and more
0.76 (0.68,0.84)
< 0.001
1.01(0.89,1.15)
0.80
Sex (Boy)
 Girl
2.31(2.15, 2.49)
<0.001
2.40 (2.15,2.68)
<0.001
Region (urban)
 Rural
0.67 (0.61,0.72)
<0.001
0.85 (0.74,0.97)
0.02
Family size (<4)
  >4
0.78 (0.73,0.84)
<0.001
0.90 (0.82,0.98)
0.04
Sweetened beverages (non-daily)
 daily
0.70 (0.62, 0.80)
<0.001
0.82(0.70,0.95)
0.01
Living with parent (none of them)
 One of them
1.30 (0.91,1.86)
0.14
1.50 (0.93,2.42)
0.09
 Both of them
1.43 (1.05,1.97)
0.02
1.36 (0.92,2.02)
0.11
Smoking status (no smoker)
 Only passive smoker
0.74 (0.68,0.80)
< 0.001
0.76 (0.70,0.83)
< 0.001
 Only active smoker
0.39 (0.25, 0.61)
< 0.001
0.45 (0.27, 0.73)
0.001
 Passive and active smoker
0.53 (0.41,0.70)
<0.001
0.60(0.45,0.79)
<0.001
 Age (year)
1.04 (1.02, 1.05)
<0.001
1.03 (1.02,1.05)a
<0.001
aStatistically significant
OR odds ratio, CI confidence interval, Q quantile, FH family history
To evaluate the relationship between SES and oral health for identifying particular factors associated with SES that contribute to the risk of dental caries, analysis of the socio-economic factors which cause the gap in tooth brushing between the first and fifth quintiles showed that only 3 % of the difference was explained by the factors considered in the study, and 17 % remained unknown. Residence area, family size, and smoking status made a significant contribution to the gap between the first and last SES groups. Residence area ( −2.01 (95 % CI: −3.46, −0.55)) was along with the maximum levels of gaps between SES categories.
Associations of independent variables with tooth brushing in logistic regression analysis are provided in Table 3.
Table 3
Decomposition of the gap in teeth brushing between the first and fifth quintiles of socio-economic status
 
Percent (95 % CI)
p-value
Prevalence in the fifth quintile
58.20 (56.21,60.19)*
< 0.001
Prevalence in the first quintile
78.66 (77.03,80.29)*
< 0.001
Differences (total gap)
−23.03 (−22.96,−17,89) *
< 0.001
Due to endowments (explained)
 Age
−0.12 (−0.28,0.04)
0.14
 Sex
0.35 (−0.14,0.83)
0.16
 Region
−2.01 (−3.46,−0.55)*
0.01
 Family size
−1.73 (−2.97,−0.50)*
0.01
 Birth order
0.20 (−1.13,1.53)
0.77
 Sweetened beverages
−0.09 (−0.21,0.03)
0.13
 Living with parents
−0.06 (−0.20,0.09)
0.43
 Smoking status
−0.37 (−0.68,−0.06) *
0.02
 Subtotal gap
−3.83 (−5.94,−1.73)*
< 0.001
Due to coefficients (unexplained)
 Age
−6.15 (−15.04,2.74)
0.18
 Sex
8.12 (0.65,15.59) *
0.03
 Region
−12.78 (−21.71,−3.86)*
0.01
 Family size
−2.60 (−11.96,6.77)
0.59
 Birth order
2.76 (−0.79,6.30)
0.13
 Sweet meat
0.72 (−0.05,1.50)
0.07
 Living with parent
0.17 (−0.27,0.62)
0.45
 Smoking status
1.15 (−1.04,3.34)
0.30
 Constant
−8.02 (−25.30,2.25)
0.36
 Subtotal gap
−16.63(−19.84,−13.42)*
< 0.001
*p-value 0.05

Discussion

This study demonstrated considerable differences in oral health-related behaviors between high and low SES groups of Iranian children and adolescents; thus, the prevalence of tooth brushing increased with improvement of SES.
There was 20 % difference in prevalence of tooth brushing between the first and fifth quintiles. In addition, individuals in quintile 5 families had significantly higher odds of tooth brushing compared with those in quintile 1 families.
The association between birth order, family size, and living area with tooth brushing showed that children and adolescents with higher order of birth and larger family size brushed less frequently, 24 % and 22 %, respectively, as well as those living in rural areas (33 %). In contrast, tooth brushing was 2.31 times more prevalent in girls; with increasing the age of population, the odds of tooth brushing increased. Moreover, analysis of the socio-economic factors, which causes the gap in tooth brushing between the first and fifth quintiles, showed that only 3 % of the difference was explained by the factors considered in the study; however, 17 % remained unknown.
Most studies confirm the association between socio-economic status and dental caries in children and adolescents [711, 3032]. In a study conducted in Scotland, the inequalities in tooth brushing were examined among adolescents, revealing that socio-economic inequalities in tooth brushing were significant for both boys and girls at all ages [12]. Mashoto provided a survey on socio-demographic disparity in oral health among adolescents in Tanzania; adolescents in the poorest wealth category presented poor oral hygiene behavior who were more frequently no users of tooth brushing compared with the least poor wealth category [13]. In another study in Belgium, oral health-related lifestyle behaviors were investigated among children and adolescents, showing that children from lower-SES families had less frequent tooth-brushing [33]. Some studies in the United Kingdom had similar findings. It was found that children in lower socio-economic families were more likely to have late tooth brushing and brush less frequently [3436].
On the other hand, oral health behaviors of children in low and high socioeconomic status families were evaluated for a period of 9 years in a study conducted in Iowa. In contrast, it was shown that there were virtually no differences at any time point between the two groups regarding tooth-brushing frequency [37].
Third National Oral Health Survey among 5-year-olds in four Chinese provinces revealed a significant gradient in children’s Decayed, Missing, and Filled Teeth (DMFT) by household income which increased from 2.63 in the highest income group to 4.70 in the lowest income group. It was considerable that parental education was not significantly related to childhood dental caries [38]. Another study on adolescent sample of Pennsylvania showed that lower SES was associated with higher prevalence of DMFT and severe caries. Lower SES was associated with lower rates of brushing, less use of sealants, and receiving less recent dental services [39]. Using seven comparable cross-sectional data of nationally representative samples of 11- to 15-year-olds in Denmark, the absolute social inequality increased from 7.7 % in 1991 to 14.6 % in 2014 as the prevalence difference between low and high social class. The relative social inequality assessed by odds ratios for infrequent tooth brushing also increased from 1991 to 2014 [40]. Regarding the related factors, an investigation on 11- to 15-year-olds in Denmark revealed that, comparing with girls, boys in lower social class had higher odds ratio of infrequent tooth brushing than girls: 1.98 (95 % confidence interval 1.62–2.41) vs. 1.80 (1.53–2.24). Also, immigrants and descendants had higher odds compared to adolescents of Danish origin. Analyses of the combined effect of social class and migration status showed that the social gradient in tooth brushing habits among ethnic Danes was not found among groups of immigrants and descendants [41].
Considering other studies, analysis of oral health behaviors changes over time in Brazilians revealed that the prevalence of oral health behaviors followed an increasing trend; however, these changes were not related to maternal education inequalities [42].
The strengths of the study are as follows. First, the current study is one of the first few of its kind in evaluating the socio-economic inequality in oral health behavior among Iranian children and adolescents. Another advantage is the large nationwide study population which increased the chance of finding specific and statistically significant differences. Furthermore, the other strength of the study is its novelty in selection of pediatric and adolescence age group. Finally, the association between tooth brushing and socio-economic status of the study population was considered using the Oaxaca-Blinder decomposition method and well-conceptualized measures of socio-economic inequality in health. The use of measures of absolute inequality including slope index of inequality (SII), relative inequality such as concentration index (C), and regression-based rate ratios between the groups well-suited the objective of the study.
The findings should be considered in the context of potential limitations. The major limitation was cross-sectional nature of the study; thus, a causal relationship cannot be inferred from the current findings, and longitudinal studies are required to examine the causality and clinical importance of the outcomes. In addition, the teeth could not be examined and data could not be collected regarding oral hygiene status; however, tooth brushing was used as a single marker for evaluation of oral health. Considering the factors of inequality, there was a low portion of explained factors, i.e. other socio-economic factors might have affected oral health behavior.
Monitoring socio-economic inequality in health, including oral health, is considered important in formulating appropriate public policies. Population oral health policies aiming to improve the overall oral health of the population should target socio-economic inequality. Furthermore, those policies may need to be modified to suit different socio-economic groups.

Conclusion

Overall, the current analysis revealed socio-economic inequality in oral health behavior of Iranian children and adolescents. Since oral hygiene is essential to oral health, it is wise to provide the population with adequate education and training on children’s oral health behavior and its relationship with dental caries. It is helpful to address factors that influence oral health in order to develop and implement complementary public health actions. Prevention programs and policies for primitive and primary prevention of oral diseases should aim to increase the oral health awareness and improve oral health.

Acknowledgements

This nationwide survey was conducted in Iran with the cooperation of the Ministry of Health and Medical Education; Ministry of Education and Training, Child Growth and Development Research Center, Isfahan University of Medical Sciences; and Endocrinology and Metabolism Research center of Tehran University of Medical Sciences.

Funding

This study was conducted as part of a national school-based survey.

Availability of data and material

No additional data are available.

Authors’ contributions

Study concept and design: RK, MQ, MEM, GA and RH; drafting of the manuscript, and critical revision of the manuscript: SS, RK, AR, MQ, SD, AG, AS and RH; Statistical Analysis: SS, MQ, AS, MS, MM and HA. All of the authors have given final approval of the version to be published.

Competing interests

The authors declare that they have no competing interests.
A comprehensive verbal description of the nature and purpose of the study was given to the students, their parents and teachers. Written informed consent was obtained from parents. Ethical committees of Tehran University of Medical Sciences and Isfahan University of Medical Sciences reviewed and approved study protocols.
Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://​creativecommons.​org/​licenses/​by/​4.​0/​), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://​creativecommons.​org/​publicdomain/​zero/​1.​0/​) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
Anhänge

Appendix

Table 4
List of questions regarding oral health behavior according to Global School-Based Student Health Survey (GSHS) questionnaires
Question
Response
Oral health behaviors
How often do you brush your teeth?
1. More than once a day
2. Once a day
3. At least once a day
4. Once a week
5. Less than once a week
6. Never
Demographic variables
Parental education
1. Illiterate
2. Elementary
3. Secondary
4. Diploma
5. Bachelor
6. Master or higher
Type of home
1. Private
2. Rented
Maternal job
1. Unemployed
2. Worker
3. Employee
4. Farmer
5. Self-employment
Paternal job
1. Unemployed
2. Worker
3. Employee
4. Farmer
5. Self-employment
Socioeconomic status
Highest
Second highest
Moderate
Second lowest
Lowest
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Metadaten
Titel
Socioeconomic inequality in oral health behavior in Iranian children and adolescents by the Oaxaca-Blinder decomposition method: the CASPIAN- IV study
verfasst von
Saeid Safiri
Roya Kelishadi
Ramin Heshmat
Ali Rahimi
Shirin Djalalinia
Anoosheh Ghasemian
Ali Sheidaei
Mohammad Esmaeil Motlagh
Gelayol Ardalan
Morteza Mansourian
Hamid Asayesh
Mahdi Sepidarkish
Mostafa Qorbani
Publikationsdatum
01.12.2016
Verlag
BioMed Central
Erschienen in
International Journal for Equity in Health / Ausgabe 1/2016
Elektronische ISSN: 1475-9276
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12939-016-0423-8

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