Abstract

ObjectivesThe increasing medical expenses of elderly persons in Japan’s rapidly ageing society have become a major concern. It is therefore important to elucidate the factors associated with such escalation. Here, we focused on the relationship between subjective self-assessment of oral health, as an index of general health, and medical expenses (excluding dental repair) under the hypothesis that oral health contributes to general medical expenses. Several studies have shown that oral health status is correlated with general health status among elderly persons. We speculated that oral health status might show a relation with medical costs among elderly persons. However, few studies have investigated this relationship to date.Materials and MethodsParticipants were 259 elderly subjects (range: 65–84 years; 120 men, 139 women) residing independently. Subjective assessment of oral health was evaluated by their responses (‘Good’, ‘Not good’ and ‘Not at all good’) on a survey questionnaire. The correlation between subjective assessment of oral health and medical expenditure was analysed using Spearman’s rank method, the Mann–Whitney U-test and the Kruskal–Wallis test. Medical expenses were used as the dependent variable in multinomial logistic regression analysis with background and intraoral factors as independent variables.ResultsA slight yet statistically significant correlation was observed between subjective assessment of oral health and outpatient treatment fees.ConclusionThe findings revealed that subjective assessment of oral health is significantly and independently related to the medical expenses of community-dwelling elderly persons after adjusting for social background, living environment and physical factors.

Highlights

  • As of 2008, the life expectancy of women and men in Japan was 86.05 years and 79.29 years, respectively[1], and the percentage of people aged ‡65 years reached 24.7%2

  • Several studies have shown that the status of oral health is significantly related to the status of general health among elderly persons[4,5,6,7]

  • Self-assessment of oral health, subjective, is considered a reliable indicator of oral health status[10,11], and here we attempted to elucidate the relationship between subjective self-assessment of oral health and medical expenses among community-dwelling elderly persons under the hypothesis that oral health contributes to general medical expenses in addition to general health problems

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Summary

Introduction

As of 2008, the life expectancy of women and men in Japan was 86.05 years and 79.29 years, respectively[1], and the percentage of people aged ‡65 years reached 24.7%2. If the aged population continues to increase, the number of people with chronic diseases will grow, suggesting that health care costs will escalate. In Japan, most people are covered by a universal health insurance system, and increasing medical costs are becoming a serious social problem. Elucidation of the factors associated with escalating health care costs is important. Several studies have shown that the status of oral health is significantly related to the status of general health (nutritional status, physical performance, functioning in activities of daily living and mortality) among elderly persons[4,5,6,7]. We speculated that oral health status might show a relation with medical costs among elderly persons

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