Abstract

Studies have usually addressed the utilization of either medical or dental services, and less is known about how medical and dentist visits are associated. As oral health is linked to systemic health, knowledge on care coordination between dental and medical services is important to gain understanding of the overall functioning of health care. Register data on 25–64-year-old residents of the city of Oulu, Finland, were used for the years 2017–2018 (N = 91,060). Logit models were estimated to analyze the probability of dentist visits, according to the number of medical visits in total and by three separate health care sectors. The majority, 61%, had visited both a medical professional and a dentist. All sectors combined, as few as one to two visits increased the odds of dentist visits (OR: 1.43, CI: 1.33, 1.53). When separated by medical professionals’ health care sectors, for one to two visits, the strongest association was found with public (OR: 1.17, CI: 1.12, 1.22) and private sector (OR: 1.35, CI: 1.30, 1.41). For occupational health service visits, the odds increased only after six or more visits. The results support the idea of integrated medical and dental care. However, the result may also arise from individual health behavior where health-conscious persons seek both medical and dental care independently.

Highlights

  • Utilization of health care has been shown to have a strong social gradient

  • While the focus has been on the socioeconomic, morbidity, and demographic characteristics among attenders of either medical or dental care [1,2,3,4,5], very little is known about how the utilization of medical services itself is related to the attendance of dental health care

  • The setting that we studied in this paper, the Finnish health care system, is unique in the sense that it is organized in three co-existing sectors: a public sector, occupational health services (OHS), and a private sector [18]

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Summary

Introduction

Utilization of health care has been shown to have a strong social gradient. Irrespective of need of care, those with higher socioeconomic status are more likely to utilize medical and dental services [1,2,3,4,5]. Among those who use health care, the most frequent health care attenders have been shown to come from vulnerable groups in terms of chronic sickness [6,7] and socioeconomic background [7,8,9]. For the overall assessment of the functioning of the health care system, it is necessary to gain knowledge on how utilization of medical services predicts the utilization of dental services

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