Published in the听British Dental Journal,听鈥 paper shows how, despite recent gains, adults and children across New 麻豆传媒团队are still experiencing high levels of preventable tooth decay.
A nationally representative sample of adults and children was used to determine the type of toothpaste more commonly used in New 麻豆传媒团队households. It was one of the first times non-fluoride toothpaste had been included in this kind of research.
Dr Hobbs, who recently received an Emerging Researcher Award from the Health Research Society of Canterbury (HRSC), explains part of the problem may be as simple as the toothpaste we鈥檙e reaching for from supermarket shelves.
鈥淥verall, 6.8% of adults and 6.4% of children use non-fluoride toothpaste. These findings will be important as a recent review showed that brushing in the absence of fluoride failed to show a benefit in terms of reducing the dental caries,鈥 he says.
鈥淚nterestingly, while poor oral health often affects those who are living in the most deprived areas, this study shows that the highest percentage of the population [both children and adults] using non-fluoride toothpaste are actually living in some of the least deprived parts of the country.鈥澨
Dr Hobbs鈥 research was carried out in UC鈥檚听GeoHealth Laboratory, which focuses on how the local and national contexts shape health outcomes and health inequalities and inequities across New Zealand.听
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