BACKGROUND Oral health service utilisation contributes to positive oral health and indicates realised access to services. The study aimed to describe patterns of oral health service use among overseas-born and… Click to show full abstract
BACKGROUND Oral health service utilisation contributes to positive oral health and indicates realised access to services. The study aimed to describe patterns of oral health service use among overseas-born and Australia-born populations and assess equity in access to services. METHODS The study used data from Australia's National Study of Adult Oral Health 2017-18 and was guided by the Aday and Andersen framework of access to health and Australia's National Oral Health Plan. Descriptive analyses of service use by perceived need, enabling and predisposing factors were compared between four groups: Australian-born and overseas-born that mainly speak English and Australian-born and overseas-born that mainly speak a language other than English. RESULTS Overseas-born who mainly speak a language other than English experienced greater oral health care inequity, largely driven by financial difficulty (avoided care due to cost: 42% vs 27%-28%; avoided/delayed visiting due to cost: 48% vs 37%-38%; cost prevented treatment: 32% vs 18%-24%). The most favourable visiting patterns were among the Australian-born population that speaks a language other than English. CONCLUSIONS The study demonstrates clear inequity experienced among immigrants in accessibility as measured through indicators of oral health care utilisation and factors related to inequity, such as ability to pay for services. © 2022 Australian Dental Association.
               
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