Abstract

Little information exists about the loss of all one’s teeth (edentulism) among older adults in low- and middle-income countries. This study examines the prevalence of edentulism and associated factors among older adults in a cross-sectional study across six such countries. Data from the World Health Organization (WHO’s) Study on global AGEing and adult health (SAGE) Wave 1 was used for this study with adults aged 50-plus from China (N = 13,367), Ghana (N = 4724), India (N = 7150), Mexico (N = 2315), Russian Federation (N = 3938) and South Africa (N = 3840). Multivariate regression was used to assess predictors of edentulism. The overall prevalence of edentulism was 11.7% in the six countries, with India, Mexico, and Russia has higher prevalence rates (16.3%–21.7%) than China, Ghana, and South Africa (3.0%–9.0%). In multivariate logistic analysis sociodemographic factors (older age, lower education), chronic conditions (arthritis, asthma), health risk behaviour (former daily tobacco use, inadequate fruits and vegetable consumption) and other health related variables (functional disability and low social cohesion) were associated with edentulism. The national estimates and identified factors associated with edentulism among older adults across the six countries helps to identify areas for further exploration and targets for intervention.

Highlights

  • Edentulism is the state of having lost all of one’s natural teeth [1]

  • The aim of this study was to investigate the prevalence of edentulism and associated factors among older adults in six lower- and upper-middle income countries

  • The overall prevalence of edentulism was 11.7%, with India, Mexico, and Russia have higher prevalence rates (16.3%–21.7%) than China, Ghana, and

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Summary

Introduction

Edentulism is the state of having lost all of one’s natural teeth [1]. The 2010 Global Burden of Disease Study results shows a steady decline in age-standardized population Year) DALY rates for edentulism, from 144/100,000 in 1990 to 89/100,000 [3]. Wu et al [5] found a wide variation in edentulism prevalence among adults aged 50 and above in five ethnic groups in the United States: Asians, African Americans, Hispanics, Native. In 2008, Native Americans had the highest predicated rate of edentulism based on oral exam (24%), followed by African Americans (19%), Caucasians (17%), Asians (14%), and Hispanics (14%). Among Europeans, Müller et al [8] observed in a review of clinical and cross-sectional interview studies that in the 1990s the prevalence of edentulism among

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