Abstract
BackgroundDecisions about children’s oral health care are made by parents. Parents' dental insurance, dental service use, and perceived affordability all influence their children’s oral health care. MethodsUsing data from the 2016 National Health Interview Survey, the authors constructed a database of 4,396 nationally representative US children and their linked household adults. The authors assessed the relationship between children’s and parents’ use of dental services, private and public dental insurance, and deferral of oral health care owing to cost. To adjust for factors that may influence outcomes independently, the authors performed multivariate analyses to consider child, parent, and household characteristics. ResultsChildren have 2 times the risk of lacking a dental visit in a year if the parent has none, 7 times the risk of reportedly lacking dental coverage if the parent has none, and nearly 10 times the risk of having care deferred owing to cost if the parent finds oral health care unaffordable. Affordability risk factors for children include older age and minority race, whereas protective factors include public insurance, parents with higher educational attainment, and female-led households. Increased oral health care use by children was associated with states that provide more extensive adult Medicaid dental benefits. ConclusionsGreater parental dental service use, dental coverage, and ability to afford care benefit their children’s use of oral health care. Practice ImplicationsPolicies by employers and government that expand quality private and public coverage for adults hold strong promise to improve oral health care for both parents and their children.
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