Artículos de revistas
Contextual and individual inequalities in dental pain prevalence among Brazilian adults and elders
Fecha
2012Registro en:
CADERNOS DE SAUDE PUBLICA, RIO DE JANIERO, v. 28, suppl., pp. S114-S123, JAN, 2012
0102-311X
10.1590/S0102-311X2012001300012
Autor
Peres, Marco A.
Iser, Betine Pinto Moehlecke
Peres, Karen Glazer
Malta, Deborah Carvalho
Antunes, Jose Leopoldo Ferreira
Institución
Resumen
This study aimed to assess the prevalence of dental pain among adults and older people living in Brazil's State capitals. Information was gathered from the Telephone Survey Surveillance System for Risk and Protective Factors for Chronic Diseases (VIGITEL) in 2009 (n = 54,367). Dental pain was the outcome. Geographic region, age, gender, race, schooling, private health coverage, smoking, and soft drink consumption were the explanatory variables. Multilevel Poisson regression models were performed. Prevalence of dental pain was 15.2%; Macapa and Sao Luis had prevalence rates greater than 20%; all capitals in the South and Southeast, plus Cuiaba, Campo Grande, Maceio, Recife, and Natal had prevalence rates less than 15%. Factors associated with increased prevalence of dental pain were the North and Northeast regions, female gender, black/brown skin color, lack of private health insurance, smoking, and soft drink consumption. Dental pain is a public health problem that should be monitored by health surveillance systems.