Cargando…

An intersectionality approach to Indigenous oral health inequities; the super-additive impacts of racism and negative life events

OBJECTIVES: Indigenous Australians experience cumulative forms of oppression. Using intersectionality as the underlying analytical framework, and with oral health as an outcome, we demonstrate how oppressions are interlinked and cannot be treated in isolation. The study aimed to quantify the cumulat...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Jamieson, Lisa, Ju, Xiangqun, Haag, Dandara, Ribeiro, Pedro, Soares, Gustavo, Hedges, Joanne
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9870138/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36689412
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0279614
_version_ 1784876909949091840
author Jamieson, Lisa
Ju, Xiangqun
Haag, Dandara
Ribeiro, Pedro
Soares, Gustavo
Hedges, Joanne
author_facet Jamieson, Lisa
Ju, Xiangqun
Haag, Dandara
Ribeiro, Pedro
Soares, Gustavo
Hedges, Joanne
author_sort Jamieson, Lisa
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVES: Indigenous Australians experience cumulative forms of oppression. Using intersectionality as the underlying analytical framework, and with oral health as an outcome, we demonstrate how oppressions are interlinked and cannot be treated in isolation. The study aimed to quantify the cumulative effect of two forms of oppression on Indigenous Australian oral health inequities. METHODS: This observational study was conducted Feb 2018—Jan 2020. Recruitment occurred through Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisations in South Australia, Australia. Eligibility included identifying as Indigenous, residing in South Australia and aged 18+ years. Socio-demographic factors, health-related characteristics, experience of racism, negative life events and self-reported oral health outcomes were collected. The main outcomes were fair/poor self-rated oral health and oral health related quality of life, measured by OHIP-14. Effect-measure modification was used to verify differences on effect sizes per strata of negative life events and racism. The presence of modification was indicated by Relative Excess Risk due to Interactions (RERIs). RESULTS: Data were obtained for 1,011 participants, median age 37 years, 66% female and 63% residing in non-metropolitan locations. Over half (52%) had experienced racism in the past 12 months and 85% had experienced one or more negative life events. Around one-third (34%) rated their oral health as fair/poor and the mean OHIP-14 score was 17. A higher proportion of participants who had experienced both racism and negative life events (46%) were male (52%), aged 37+ years (47%), resided in metropolitan locations (57%), reported difficulty paying a $100 dental bill (47%), had fair/poor self-rated oral health (54%) and higher mean OHIP-14 scores (20). The RERIs observed were 0.31 for fair/poor self-rated oral health and 0.23 for mean OHIP-14. The positive RERIs indicated a super-additive effect between racism, negative life events (effect modifier) and self-reported oral health outcomes. CONCLUSION: The more oppressions participants experienced, in the form of racism and negative life events, the greater the burden of poor self-reported oral health. The study is one of the first to use intersectionality as a theory to explain oral health inequities as experienced by Indigenous Australians.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9870138
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-98701382023-01-24 An intersectionality approach to Indigenous oral health inequities; the super-additive impacts of racism and negative life events Jamieson, Lisa Ju, Xiangqun Haag, Dandara Ribeiro, Pedro Soares, Gustavo Hedges, Joanne PLoS One Research Article OBJECTIVES: Indigenous Australians experience cumulative forms of oppression. Using intersectionality as the underlying analytical framework, and with oral health as an outcome, we demonstrate how oppressions are interlinked and cannot be treated in isolation. The study aimed to quantify the cumulative effect of two forms of oppression on Indigenous Australian oral health inequities. METHODS: This observational study was conducted Feb 2018—Jan 2020. Recruitment occurred through Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisations in South Australia, Australia. Eligibility included identifying as Indigenous, residing in South Australia and aged 18+ years. Socio-demographic factors, health-related characteristics, experience of racism, negative life events and self-reported oral health outcomes were collected. The main outcomes were fair/poor self-rated oral health and oral health related quality of life, measured by OHIP-14. Effect-measure modification was used to verify differences on effect sizes per strata of negative life events and racism. The presence of modification was indicated by Relative Excess Risk due to Interactions (RERIs). RESULTS: Data were obtained for 1,011 participants, median age 37 years, 66% female and 63% residing in non-metropolitan locations. Over half (52%) had experienced racism in the past 12 months and 85% had experienced one or more negative life events. Around one-third (34%) rated their oral health as fair/poor and the mean OHIP-14 score was 17. A higher proportion of participants who had experienced both racism and negative life events (46%) were male (52%), aged 37+ years (47%), resided in metropolitan locations (57%), reported difficulty paying a $100 dental bill (47%), had fair/poor self-rated oral health (54%) and higher mean OHIP-14 scores (20). The RERIs observed were 0.31 for fair/poor self-rated oral health and 0.23 for mean OHIP-14. The positive RERIs indicated a super-additive effect between racism, negative life events (effect modifier) and self-reported oral health outcomes. CONCLUSION: The more oppressions participants experienced, in the form of racism and negative life events, the greater the burden of poor self-reported oral health. The study is one of the first to use intersectionality as a theory to explain oral health inequities as experienced by Indigenous Australians. Public Library of Science 2023-01-23 /pmc/articles/PMC9870138/ /pubmed/36689412 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0279614 Text en © 2023 Jamieson et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Jamieson, Lisa
Ju, Xiangqun
Haag, Dandara
Ribeiro, Pedro
Soares, Gustavo
Hedges, Joanne
An intersectionality approach to Indigenous oral health inequities; the super-additive impacts of racism and negative life events
title An intersectionality approach to Indigenous oral health inequities; the super-additive impacts of racism and negative life events
title_full An intersectionality approach to Indigenous oral health inequities; the super-additive impacts of racism and negative life events
title_fullStr An intersectionality approach to Indigenous oral health inequities; the super-additive impacts of racism and negative life events
title_full_unstemmed An intersectionality approach to Indigenous oral health inequities; the super-additive impacts of racism and negative life events
title_short An intersectionality approach to Indigenous oral health inequities; the super-additive impacts of racism and negative life events
title_sort intersectionality approach to indigenous oral health inequities; the super-additive impacts of racism and negative life events
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9870138/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36689412
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0279614
work_keys_str_mv AT jamiesonlisa anintersectionalityapproachtoindigenousoralhealthinequitiesthesuperadditiveimpactsofracismandnegativelifeevents
AT juxiangqun anintersectionalityapproachtoindigenousoralhealthinequitiesthesuperadditiveimpactsofracismandnegativelifeevents
AT haagdandara anintersectionalityapproachtoindigenousoralhealthinequitiesthesuperadditiveimpactsofracismandnegativelifeevents
AT ribeiropedro anintersectionalityapproachtoindigenousoralhealthinequitiesthesuperadditiveimpactsofracismandnegativelifeevents
AT soaresgustavo anintersectionalityapproachtoindigenousoralhealthinequitiesthesuperadditiveimpactsofracismandnegativelifeevents
AT hedgesjoanne anintersectionalityapproachtoindigenousoralhealthinequitiesthesuperadditiveimpactsofracismandnegativelifeevents
AT jamiesonlisa intersectionalityapproachtoindigenousoralhealthinequitiesthesuperadditiveimpactsofracismandnegativelifeevents
AT juxiangqun intersectionalityapproachtoindigenousoralhealthinequitiesthesuperadditiveimpactsofracismandnegativelifeevents
AT haagdandara intersectionalityapproachtoindigenousoralhealthinequitiesthesuperadditiveimpactsofracismandnegativelifeevents
AT ribeiropedro intersectionalityapproachtoindigenousoralhealthinequitiesthesuperadditiveimpactsofracismandnegativelifeevents
AT soaresgustavo intersectionalityapproachtoindigenousoralhealthinequitiesthesuperadditiveimpactsofracismandnegativelifeevents
AT hedgesjoanne intersectionalityapproachtoindigenousoralhealthinequitiesthesuperadditiveimpactsofracismandnegativelifeevents