The Journal of the American Dental Association
HOME HELP FEEDBACK SUBSCRIPTIONS ARCHIVE SEARCH TABLE OF CONTENTS
 QUICK SEARCH:   [advanced]


     


J Am Dent Assoc, Vol 135, No 11, 1550-1558.
© 2004 American Dental Association

This Article
Right arrow Abstract Freely available
Right arrow Full Text (PDF)
Right arrow Alert me when this article is cited
Right arrow Alert me if a correction is posted
Services
Right arrow Similar articles in this journal
Right arrow Similar articles in PubMed
Right arrow Alert me to new issues of the journal
Right arrow Download to citation manager
Right arrow reprints & permissions
Citing Articles
Right arrow Citing Articles via HighWire
Right arrow Citing Articles via Google Scholar
Google Scholar
Right arrow Articles by GRAHAM, M. A.
Right arrow Articles by TOMAR, S. L.
Right arrow Search for Related Content
PubMed
Right arrow PubMed Citation
Right arrow Articles by GRAHAM, M. A.
Right arrow Articles by TOMAR, S. L.

RESEARCH

JADA Continuing Education

Is trust a predictor of having a dental home?



MICHELLE A. GRAHAM, D.M.D. ,M.H.S.E., M.P.H., HENRIETTA L. LOGAN, Ph.D. and SCOTT L. TOMAR, D.M.D., Dr.P.H.


   ABSTRACT
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 METHODS
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 CONCLUSIONS
 REFERENCES
 
Background. Developing a better understanding of sociodemographic variables that predict having a dental home may aid in reducing the disparities in oral health among minorities in the United States.

Methods. The authors used data from a telephone survey of 1,005 randomly selected low-income residents (403 men, 602 women) aged 18 or older in two Florida counties—Miami-Dade and Duval—to examine the sociodemographic characteristics of people who reported having a regular dentist.

Results. Bivariate analyses showed that respondents’ levels of trust in physicians and dentists were strongly associated with having a dental home. After adjusting for other variables in a multiple logistic regression model, the authors found that respondents with a moderate level of trust in physicians and dentists were 52 percent less likely (odds ratio, or OR, = 0.48; 95 percent confidence interval, or CI, 0.26 to 0.89) and those with low trust were 54 percent less likely (OR = 0.46; 95 percent CI, 0.28 to 0.75) than those with high trust to have a regular dentist. Race/ethnicity, sex, age, education level and employment status remained significant correlates of having a regular dentist in the multivariate model.

Conclusions. The results of this study suggest that efforts to reduce disparities in access to dental care and establish dental homes should include programs to increase patients’ trust in dental professionals.

Clinical Implications. While policy-makers consider ways to improve access to dental care, dental professionals should work at the community level to increase the level of trust of the community in the dental health provider.

One of the major findings of the U.S. surgeon general’s report on oral health1 is that oral diseases and disorders are extensive and may be severe in vulnerable populations. This often results in conditions and treatments that may undermine patients’ self-images and self-esteem, discourage normal social interaction, cause other health problems and lead to chronic stress and depression, as well as result in great expense. In addition, there are profound and consequential oral health disparities within the U.S. population, some of which may be related to income, age, sex, race/ethnicity or health status. Those disparities include unequal access to dental care services.

Efforts to reduce disparities in access to dental care and establish dental homes should include programs to increase patients’ trust in dental professionals.

The use of dental care services is complex, as it involves insurance coverage and affordability, geographic accessibility of providers, provider availability and participation in various types of insurance plans, provider interest in treating certain subpopulations, valuation of health care services and perceived need for health care services.2 An additional factor that may influence the use of dental services is the presence of a "dental home," which has been described by Nowak and Casamassimo3 as an accessible, family-centered, continuous, comprehensive, coordinated, compassionate and culturally competent source for dental care. Understanding of the sociodemographic variables that predict patients’ use of a dental home might help reduce the observed disparities in oral health among minority groups.

One characteristic that may be linked to who seeks regular dental care is patients’ level of trust in the health care system and health care providers. Several authors have posited that mistrust of medicine and research among African-Americans and other minority groups may be rooted in experiences extending back to slavery and continuing to the present day.46 One view is that blacks’ cultural mistrust and suspicion developed in response to racism and mistreatment in medical research and clinical settings by the larger American society.7,8 For example, Thomas and Quinn9 stated that the strategies used to recruit and retain participants in the Tuskegee Syphilis Study of untreated syphilis in black men were quite similar to those being advocated for HIV/AIDS prevention programs today. While trust affects almost every aspect of the doctor-patient interaction, from personal disclosure to cooperation in treatment,10 culture strongly influences how patients experience health, illness and medical care.11

Using a community-based representative sample, we tested the hypothesis that sociodemographic psychosocial variables—trust, education, income, race/ethnicity and perceived health status—predict having a regular dental home.


   METHODS
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 METHODS
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 CONCLUSIONS
 REFERENCES
 
Subjects. We obtained data for this study from a 2001 telephone-based survey of 1,005 low-income people (403 men and 602 women) aged 18 years and older that was conducted to assess their knowledge of and attitudes about preventive health care. We randomly selected the subjects from two metropolitan counties in Florida: Miami-Dade (n = 518) and Duval (n = 487). Complete data on the major analytic variables were available for 962 (95.7 percent) respondents. On the basis of responses to questions about race and Hispanic origin, we classified 128 respondents as Hispanic (of any race), 515 as non-Hispanic blacks (blacks), 255 as non-Hispanic whites (whites) and 64 as other unspecified race/ethnicity. The mean age of the subjects was 43.9 years, and the median education level was 13 years.

Instrument development. The 70-item survey instrument consisted of items that assessed trust in the health care system, concerns about AIDS, attitudes about and willingness to participate in cancer screenings, perceived racial discrimination in the health care system, medical and dental care attendance patterns and various demographic information. The questions were drawn from multiple sources including prior surveys,12,13 a previously published study14 and items created for this survey.

A panel of experts reviewed the questionnaire. Then we pilot tested the questionnaire among a convenience sample of adults, modified it and had it reviewed by a panel of telephone survey experts with the University of Florida Bureau of Economic and Business Research. We administered the resulting survey in September and October 2001 from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday through Friday, Saturday morning and afternoon, and Sunday afternoon and evening.

Telephone survey and sampling scheme. We used a random digit dialing, or RDD, telephone-sampling database (GENESYS, Marketing Systems Group, Fort Washington, Pa.) to select the sample for this study. The database, which is updated quarterly, contains telephone banks (area code plus prefix plus first two digits of suffix) that have at least one residential number listed in the white pages. The telephone banks we targeted represented low-to-moderate income households according to U.S. census tract data. The telephone banks, which are geo-coded to census tracts, permit links to the corresponding census and Current Population Survey data for those census tracts. This enabled us to isolate telephone banks in a particular county where we expected to find a minimum proportion of black households.

The primary objective of the sample design was to ensure that we could compare white and black respondents. The sample design we selected met this need, as it was not an objective of this study for us to make inferences to the entire state of Florida. We focused on specific census tracts that maximized the probability of contacting black households. We found that this sample design ensured that we would interview whites with similar socioeconomic levels as the blacks in those areas. That is, those whites who were living in high-density black areas typically also were disadvantaged economically, with a few exceptions. Thus, we could compare whites and blacks for differences in their health care behaviors without being as concerned about intervening variables such as education level and income.

For this survey, we initially defined two strata, one in Duval County and one in Miami-Dade County, in which at least 50 percent of the households were black. Then we generated and released 2,500 telephone numbers for each stratum. When it became apparent that there were not enough white respondents, we created two additional strata, one in Duval County and one in Miami-Dade County, in which at least 30 percent of the households were black, and we released an additional 2,000 telephone numbers for each stratum. Given that this was a telephone survey and that we used RDD to contact both listed and unlisted households, we had to use a database of valid telephone banks to generate the actual numbers called.

We recognized that the black culture might not have been homogenous across communities. Thus, we selected samples in Duval County and in Miami-Dade County. We expected respondents in Duval County, which includes the city of Jacksonville, to be more representative of North Florida communities culturally, with possible influences from the large naval base. And we expected respondents in Miami-Dade County to reflect the heavy influence of Latino culture. We attempted to sample 500 respondents in Miami-Dade County and in Duval County, with approximately 250 black respondents and 250 white respondents in each county.

The University of Florida Bureau of Economic and Business Research conducted the telephone-based survey, using RDD generated with Win-CATI (Version 4.1, Sawtooth Technologies, Northbrook, Ill.). Each telephone interview lasted approximately 20 minutes and the mean yield was .7 completed surveys per hour. Approximately 20 percent of the telephone interviewers were black and 60 percent were female. The survey software used call rules to rotate sampling across days and times. Numbers were called a maximum of 10 times before being finalized as unproductive. Interviewers called people who refused to participate twice.

Response rates varied, depending on the definition. Given the ambiguity in the field surrounding response rates, we present the following to show the distribution of dispositions. To complete 1,005 surveys, 9,154 telephone numbers were selected of which 1,106 were for businesses, institutions or group quarters, which were ineligible to participate. There were technical problems, no answer or consistent busy signals for an additional 5,494 telephone numbers. A total of 349 telephone numbers reached households in which physical, mental or language barriers made the potential respondents ineligible to participate. No eligible respondent was available at 353 telephone numbers, and 847 people refused to participate or did not complete the telephone survey.

Analytic variables. The dependent variable in our study was whether a respondent reported having a regular dentist, which we used as a proxy for having a dental home. We selected variables that might predict who has a regular dentist based on the findings of a national survey.15 We included the variable for trust of medical and dental care providers to test our hypothesis that people who trust medical and dental care providers are more likely to have a dental home. The interviewers asked respondents, "How much do you trust the people who provide medical and dental care?" They scored the responses on a five-point Likert-type scale, ranging from "completely" to "not at all," and then recoded them as high level of trust (completely and quite a bit), moderate level of trust (some) and low level of trust (a little and not at all). Interviewers also asked respondents to rate their general health as excellent, very good, good, fair or poor. The variables then were recoded as "excellent," "good," "average," "fair" and "poor."

Other predictor variables we were interested in were current employment status, education level (less than high school, high school or more than high school), race/ethnicity, sex, age (18–24, 25–40, 41–64 or 65 years and older) and median household income. The director of the survey matched the telephone number for each respondent to the census tract as defined by the U.S. Bureau of the Census. We used the median household income for the respondent’s census tract as the proxy for each person’s income. For analysis purposes, we split the census tract median household income variable at the median, which resulted in median household incomes of $31,350 or less and greater than $31,350.

Data analysis. We confined our data analyses to respondents 18 years and older for whom we had complete data. We conducted a bivariate analysis using {chi}2 tests. We examined the association between the selected predictor variables and having a dental home simultaneously by including them in a multiple logistic regression model. We considered the resulting odds ratios, or ORs, statistically significant if the confidence intervals did not include 1.


   RESULTS
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 METHODS
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 CONCLUSIONS
 REFERENCES
 
Characteristics of respondents. Table 1Go shows the description of the study group. Respondents with complete data (n = 962) included 515 blacks, 255 whites, 128 Hispanics and 64 people of other or unspecified race/ethnicity. A total of 575 participants (59.7 percent) were women, and 387 (40.2 percent) were men.


View this table:
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
TABLE 1 SELECTED CHARACTERISTICS OF RESPONDENTS WITH COMPLETE DATA.

 
Bivariate analysis. Although 72.5 percent of white respondents reported having a regular dentist, only 59.0 percent of blacks, 41.4 percent of Hispanics and 45.3 percent of people of other or unspecified race/ethnicity reported the same (P < .01) (Table 2Go). Women were more likely than men to have a regular dentist (62.6 percent versus 54.5 percent; P < .05). We found no significant difference in having a regular dentist among age groups in the bivariate analysis.


View this table:
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
TABLE 2 PROPORTION OF RESPONDENTS WITH OR WITHOUT REGULAR DENTISTS, BY SELECTED CHARACTERISTICS.

 
In the bivariate analysis, the reported level of trust of medical and dental providers was associated strongly with having a regular dentist. Among respondents who reported a high level of trust, 65.8 percent reported having a regular dentist compared with 47.6 percent among those who reported a medium level of trust and 35.5 percent among those who reported a low level of trust (Table 2Go). Respondents’ self-reported general health statuses showed a significant association with their having regular dentists. There was a gradient in the reporting of having a dentist by level of health status, ranging from 67.4 percent of those who reported excellent health to 38.5 percent of those who reported poor health.

The prevalence of having a regular dentist differed significantly by education level and employment status. A total of 71.4 percent of respondents with more than a high-school education, 53.3 percent of respondents with a high-school education and 33.1 percent of respondents with less than a high-school education reported having a regular dentist (P < .01). Among employed respondents, 66.1 percent reported having a regular dentist compared with 47.1 percent of unemployed respondents. Respondents living in census tracts with median annual household incomes more than $31,350 were more likely than those residing in census tracts with median incomes of $31,350 or less (62.8 percent and 55.9 percent, respectively; P < .05) to have a regular dentist.

Multivariate analysis. Table 3Go (page 1555) shows our findings from the final multiple logistic regression model of having a regular dentist. After adjusting for other variables in the model, we found that respondents with moderate levels of trust in physicians and dentists were 52 percent less likely (OR = 0.48; 95 percent confidence interval, or CI, 0.26 to 0.89) than those with high trust to have a regular dentist. Similarly, those with low trust were 54 percent less likely (OR = 0.46; 95 percent CI, 0.28 to 0.75) than those with high trust to have a regular dentist. Race/ethnicity, sex, age, education level and employment status remained significant correlates of having a regular dentist in the multivariate model. After controlling for other factors in the model, we found that median household income was not a significant predictor of having a dental home. Self-reported health status showed a trend consistent with that seen in bivariate analysis, that the likelihood of having a regular dentist tended to decline with decreasing levels of self-reported general health, though the confidence intervals for the individual OR estimates were wide and generally included 1.0.


View this table:
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
TABLE 3 MULTIPLE LOGISTIC REGRESSION ANALYSIS OF VARIABLES PREDICTING REGULAR DENTAL VISITS.

 

   DISCUSSION
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 METHODS
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 CONCLUSIONS
 REFERENCES
 
Findings from this study support our hypothesis that trust in health care providers is a significant predictor of having a regular dentist and is independent of education level, income, race/ethnicity and perceived health status. As we expected, whites were significantly more likely to have a regular dental home than were blacks or Hispanics.

The importance of having a dental home and the frequency of dental visits has been reported previously.1618 Data from the International Collaborative Study of Oral Health Outcomes provided evidence that having a usual source of dental care was the strongest and most consistent predictor of a dental visit in the past 12 months, regardless of geographic location, dental care delivery system or cultural diversity of the population.19 Further, Nowak and Casamassimo3 reported that having such an established relationship between the practitioner and the patient would foster care that is accessible, coordinated and compassionate, and would encourage mutual responsibility and trust. Only a few other studies,17,19,20 however, have looked at factors related to reporting a usual source of dental care or a dental home, and to our knowledge, ours is the first to examine the role that trust in the health care system might play in having a dental home.

The growing concerns about racial/ethnic disparities in dental health1,21 and strong evidence that minorities lack dental homes make it reasonable to assume that increasing the number of minorities who have dental homes or usual sources of general health services might improve their oral health.17,22,23 Although establishing causality with cross-sectional data is problematic, our data suggest that an important step toward facilitating dental homes among minorities would be to increase the level of trust that many minorities have in the health care system.

Mechanic10 defined trust as the expectation that people and institutions will meet their responsibilities to the person. Terrell and Terrell8 described cultural mistrust as blacks’ tendency to distrust white Americans and traditional American systems. It follows that a step toward increasing trust, while simultaneously increasing the likelihood of having a dental home, will come when the minority community perceives that the dental profession is meeting its responsibility to them. This most likely will occur through an ongoing dialogue between policy-makers, practitioners and the diverse groups of patients within the communities.

An explanation for the association between trust and having a dental home is that people who have a usual source of dental care develop trust in the overall health care system.

An alternative explanation for the association between trust and having a dental home is that people who have a usual source of dental care develop trust in the overall health care system. This explanation has important policy implications. Whether services are provided in the public or private setting, having a dental home that includes a regular provider may increase patients’ trust in the health care system and increase patients’ overall willingness to participate in their own care.19

Although the goal of our study was to identify predictors of having a dental home, the results are similar to those that predict dental care utilization. For example, analysis of a comprehensive, nationally representative data set from the 1989 National Health Interview Survey, or NHIS, showed that dental care utilization was related strongly to race, sex, income, education level and dental insurance coverage.15 Large differences in the use of dental services among blacks, Hispanics and whites were reported, even after controlling for education, income, age and other variables.

An Alabama study found that a statistically significantly higher (P < .05) proportion of Medicaid-eligible whites (31.2 percent) used dental services compared with Medicaid-eligible blacks (24.0 percent) or Medicaid-eligible people in other racial groups (21.8 percent).20 This finding suggests that there are other variables besides socioeconomic status that may account for disparities in use of dental care services. Similarly, Watson and colleagues24 studied the impact of income on children’s and adolescents’ preventive dental visits and reported that increasing financial eligibility alone has been found to be unlikely to sufficiently improve low-income children’s access to care. Another study found that blacks and Hispanics with dental insurance coverage and high incomes also had low utilization rates.15 The authors of the study speculated that barriers to care (such as lack of transportation or the inability to take time off from work to seek care), language barriers and cultural mistrust were possible explanations.

In our study, we found that higher education was associated with a greater likelihood of having a regular dentist. Moreover, the percentage of respondents with more than a high-school education was similar to that reported in the 2000 U.S. census.25 Similarly, in their study of the 1989 NHIS, Manski and Magder15 found that respondents with low levels of education were less likely (P < .001) to report visiting the dentist than those with high levels of education.

Global assessments, in which a person rates his or her health as "poor," "fair," "good," "very good" or "excellent" can be reliable indicators of his or her perceived health.1 According to Schulz and colleagues,26 racial disparities in health status often remain even after adjusting for household or individual income and education. In their study of the cumulative effects of multiple stressors on women’s health, they found that black women reported having significantly poorer health statuses than did white women, regardless of where they lived (P < .01). Our study found that those who perceived themselves as being in excellent health were more likely to report having a regular dentist. Similarly, Davidson and colleagues19 found that people who believed in the importance of oral health were significantly more likely to visit the dentist in the past 12 months.

Another potential barrier to visiting a dentist regularly is dental anxiety, since anxious patients tend to delay or avoid dental treatment, which results in a strong association with extreme deterioration of oral health.27 We did not measure anxiety; however, if the fairly new idea of having a dental home, which is patterned after the medical home concept, is adopted, it could expose patients to prevention and early intervention, as well as reduce levels of anxiety.3 Moreover, an approach to care that embraces cultural understanding is more effective than one that does not, leading to better outcomes as it helps promote patient autonomy, beneficence and justice.28

Limitations. The income data in our study are based on census tract data from the 2000 U.S. census. Because reliable self-reported income is difficult to obtain in telephone-based surveys, we sacrificed some degree of precision. We could not make more subtle forms of income discrimination. However, there is some evidence that census tract–level measures of socioeconomic status are reasonable proxy measures for person-level measures in health studies,29,30 though they may perform better for the majority population than for minority populations.31

A second limitation pertains to the cross-sectional nature of the data, which precluded causal inferences. Nevertheless, these data are consistent with other research showing that racial/ethnic differences in the use of dental service are related to a host of socioeconomic factors.

A third limitation is that telephone survey methodology assumes telephone ownership is nearly universal and that virtually all households would be in the sampling frame. We know this is an unfounded assumption; rates of telephone ownership tend to be lower in low-income areas and some racial/ethnic communities than in higher-income areas and those that are predominantly white.32 We also do not know whether the relatively large number of telephone numbers for which there was no answer resulted in some degree of sampling bias.

A fourth limitation was that women were over-represented in the group of black respondents. However, the size and racial/ethnic composition of our sample gave us some confidence in the representative nature of our respondents.


   CONCLUSIONS
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 METHODS
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 CONCLUSIONS
 REFERENCES
 
This study expands on previous studies by identifying predictors of having a dental home. The results of our community-based study have important implications for eliminating racial/ethnic disparities in the regular use of dental services. To our knowledge, no other study has shown that beyond racial/ethnic group membership, sex, age, education, income and employment status, trust in the health care system predicts having a dental home. These results suggest that efforts to reduce disparities in access to dental care must include programs to increase low-income minority patients’ confidence that their best interests are a top priority of the health care establishment. In short, while policy-makers often consider ways to improve access to dental care, dental professionals should work at the community level to earn people’s trust and educate them about oral diseases and their impact on systemic health and general well-being.



View larger version (124K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Dr. Graham was a clinical assistant professor, Department of Operative Dentistry, Division of Public Health Services and Research, University of Florida College of Dentistry, Gainesville, when this article was written. She now is a Ph.D. candidate in oral epidemiology, Harvard School of Public Health and Harvard School of Dental Medicine, Boston.

 


View larger version (123K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Dr. Logan is a professor, Department of Operative Dentistry, Division of Public Health Services and Research, University of Florida College of Dentistry, Gainesville, 1600 SW Archer Road, Box 100404, Gainesville, Fla. 32610, e-mail "hlogan{at}dental.ufl.edu". Address reprint requests to Dr. Logan.

 


View larger version (117K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Dr. Tomar is an associate professor, Department of Operative Dentistry, Division of Public Health Services and Research, University of Florida College of Dentistry, Gainesville.

 


   FOOTNOTES
 

This study was supported in part by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Research Centers (contract U48/CCU409679-07-2), Office of Minority Health (01T07190101D), the American Cancer Society (ROG-02-230-01-ROG) and National Institutes of Health grant DE14416.


The authors gratefully acknowledge Michael Loree, M.A., for his assistance with the data analysis.


   REFERENCES
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 METHODS
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 CONCLUSIONS
 REFERENCES
 

  1. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Oral health in America: A report of the surgeon general. Bethesda, Md.: National Institutes of Health, National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research; 2000:74.

  2. Edelstein BL. Disparities in oral health and access to care: findings of national surveys. Ambul Pediatr 2002;2(2 supplement):141–7.[Medline]

  3. Nowak AJ, Casamassimo PS. The dental home: a primary care oral health concept. JADA 2002;133:93–8.

  4. Dula A. African American suspicion of the healthcare system is justified; what do we do about it? Camb Q Healthc Ethics 1994;2:347–57. Cited by: Corbie-Smith G, Thomas SB, St. George DM. Distrust, race, and research. Arch Intern Med 2002;162:2458–63.

  5. Gamble VN. Under the shadow of Tuskegee: African Americans and health care. Am J Public Health 1997;87:1773–8. Cited by: Corbie-Smith G, Thomas SB, St. George DM. Distrust, race, and research. Arch Intern Med 2002;162:2458–63.[Abstract/Free Full Text]

  6. Gamble V. A legacy of distrust: African Americans and medical research. Am J Prev Med. 1993;9(6 supplement):35–8. Cited by: Corbie-Smith G, Thomas SB, St. George DM. Distrust, race, and research. Arch Intern Med 2002;162:2458–63.[Medline]

  7. Boulware LE, Cooper LA, Ratner LE, LaVeist TA, Powe NR. Race and trust in the health care system. Public Health Rep 2003;118:358–65.[Medline]

  8. Terrell F, Terrell S. An inventory to measure cultural mistrust among blacks. West J Black Stud 1981;5(3):180–5. Cited by: Alston RJ, Bell TJ. Cultural mistrust and the rehabilitation enigma for African Americans. J Rehabil 1996;62(2):16–20.

  9. Thomas SB, Quinn SC. The Tuskegee Syphilis Study, 1932 to 1972: implications for HIV education and AIDS risk education programs in the black community. Am J Public Health 1991;81:1498–505.[Abstract/Free Full Text]

  10. Mechanic D. The functions and limitations of trust in the provision of medical care. J Health Polit Policy Law 1998;23:661–86.

  11. Krakauer EL, Crenner C, Fox K. Barriers to optimum end-of-life care for minority patients. J Am Geriatr Soc 2002;50(1):182–90.[Medline]

  12. Katz RV, Kegeles SS, Kressin NR, Green BL, James SA. The Tuskegee legacy project: comparative willingness of African-Americans vs. whites to participate in biomedical research, a logistic regression analysis (abstract 1861). J Dent Res 2001;80(special issue):268.

  13. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 2000 National Health Interview Survey questionnaire. Hyattsville, Md.: CDC, National Center for Health Statistics, 2000.

  14. Horowitz AM, Goodman HS, Yellowitz JA, Nourjah PA. The need for health promotion in oral cancer prevention and early detection. J Public Health Dent 1996;56:319–30.[Medline]

  15. Manski RJ, Magder LS. Demographic and socioeconomic predictors of dental care utilization. JADA 1998;129:195–200.

  16. Gilbert GH, Branch LG, Longmate J. Dental care use by U.S. veterans eligible for VA care. Soc Sci Med 1993;36:361–70.

  17. Dolan TA, Corey CR, Freeman HE. Older Americans’ access to oral health care. J Dent Educ 1988;52:637–42.[Abstract]

  18. Evashwick C, Conrad D, Fee F. Factors related to utilization of dental services by the elderly. Am J Public Health 1982;72:1129–35.[Abstract/Free Full Text]

  19. Davidson PL, Cunningham WE, Nakazono TT, Andersen RM. Evaluating the effect of usual source of dental care on access to dental services: comparisons among diverse populations. Med Care Res Rev 1999;56(1):74–93.[Abstract]

  20. Dasanayake AP, Li Y, Wadhawan S, Kirk K, Bronstein J, Childers NK. Disparities in dental service utilization among Alabama Medicaid children. Community Dent Oral Epidemiol 2002;30:369–76.[Medline]

  21. Committee on Understanding and Eliminating Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health Care, Smedley BD, Stith AY, Nelson AR, eds. Unequal treatment: Confronting racial and ethnic disparities in health care. Washington: Institute of Medicine; 2002:1–27.

  22. Corbie-Smith G, Flagg EW, Doyle JP, O’Brien MA. Influence of usual source of care on differences by race/ethnicity in receipt of preventive services. J Gen Intern Med 2002;17(6):458–64.[Medline]

  23. Ashton CM, Haidet P, Paterniti DA, et al. Racial and ethnic disparities in the use of health services: bias, preferences, or poor communication? J Gen Intern Med 2003;18(2):146–52.[Medline]

  24. Watson MR, Manski RJ, Macek MD. The impact of income on children’s and adolescents’ preventive dental visits. JADA 2001; 132:1580–7.

  25. CensusScope. Florida: educational attainment. Available at: "www.censusscope.org/us/s12/print_chart_education.html". Accessed Sept. 27, 2004.

  26. Schulz A, Israel B, Williams D, Parker E, Becker A, James S. Social inequalities, stressors and self reported health status among African American and white women in the Detroit metropolitan area. Soc Sci Med 2000;51:1639–53.

  27. Quteish Taani DS. Dental anxiety and regularity of dental attendance in younger adults. J Oral Rehabil 2002;29:604–8.[Medline]

  28. Donate-Bartfield E, Lausten L. Why practice culturally sensitive care? Integrating ethics and behavioral science. J Dent Educ 2002;66(9):1006–11.[Medline]

  29. Anderson RT, Sorlie P, Backlund E, Johnson N, Kaplan GA. Mortality effects of community socioeconomic status. Epidemiol 1997;8(1):42–7.[Medline]

  30. Cooper RS, Kennelly JF, Durazo-Arvizu R, Oh HJ, Kaplan G, Lynch J. Relationship between premature mortality and socioeconomic factors in black and white populations of US metropolitan areas. Public Health Rep 2001;116:464–73.[Medline]

  31. Kwok RK, Yankaskas BC. The use of census data for determining race and education as SES indicators: a validation study. Ann Epidemiol 2001;11(3):171–7.[Medline]

  32. National Telecommunications and Information Administration. U.S. Department of Commerce. Falling through the net: defining the digital divide. Available at: "www.ntia.doc.gov/ntiahome/fttn99/contents.html". Accessed May 2, 2003.




This article has been cited by other articles:


Home page
Am. J. Public HealthHome page
M. Perry, R. L. Williams, N. Wallerstein, and H. Waitzkin
Social Capital and Health Care Experiences Among Low-Income Individuals
Am J Public Health, February 1, 2008; 98(2): 330 - 336.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]


Home page
PediatricsHome page
S. A. Fisher-Owens, S. A. Gansky, L. J. Platt, J. A. Weintraub, M.-J Soobader, M. D. Bramlett, and P. W. Newacheck
Influences on Children's Oral Health: A Conceptual Model
Pediatrics, September 1, 2007; 120(3): e510 - e520.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]


This Article
Right arrow Abstract Freely available
Right arrow Full Text (PDF)
Right arrow Alert me when this article is cited
Right arrow Alert me if a correction is posted
Services
Right arrow Similar articles in this journal
Right arrow Similar articles in PubMed
Right arrow Alert me to new issues of the journal
Right arrow Download to citation manager
Right arrow reprints & permissions
Citing Articles
Right arrow Citing Articles via HighWire
Right arrow Citing Articles via Google Scholar
Google Scholar
Right arrow Articles by GRAHAM, M. A.
Right arrow Articles by TOMAR, S. L.
Right arrow Search for Related Content
PubMed
Right arrow PubMed Citation
Right arrow Articles by GRAHAM, M. A.
Right arrow Articles by TOMAR, S. L.


HOME HELP FEEDBACK SUBSCRIPTIONS ARCHIVE SEARCH TABLE OF CONTENTS