4.7 Article

Does psychological stress mediate social deprivation in tooth loss?

Journal

JOURNAL OF DENTAL RESEARCH
Volume 86, Issue 12, Pages 1166-1170

Publisher

INT AMER ASSOC DENTAL RESEARCHI A D R/A A D R
DOI: 10.1177/154405910708601205

Keywords

psychological stress; tooth loss; mediator; health inequalities; risk behavior

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It is unclear which theoretical dimension of psychological stress affects health status. We hypothesized that both distress and coping mediate the relationship between socio-economic position and tooth loss. Cross-sectional data from 2915 middle-aged adults evaluated retention of < 20 teeth, behaviors, psychological stress, and sociodemographic characteristics. Principal components analysis of the Perceived Stress Scale (PSS) extracted 'distress' (alpha=0.85) and 'coping' (alpha=0.83) factors, consistent with theory. Hierarchical entry of explanatory variables into age- and sex-adjusted logistic regression models estimated odds ratios ( OR) and 95% confidence intervals [95% CI] for retention of < 20 teeth. Analysis of the separate contributions of distress and coping revealed a significant main effect of coping (OR=0.7 [95% CI=0.7-0.8]), but no effect for distress (OR=1.0 [95% CI=0.9-1.1]) or for the interaction of coping and distress. Behavior and psychological stress only modestly attenuated socio-economic inequality in retention of < 20 teeth, providing evidence to support a mediating role of coping.

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