Exploring the Link Between Social Capital and Edentulism in Low‐ and Middle‐Income Countries
Saida Ben‐Bihi, Yanfei Guo, Richard Olofsson, Hülya Çevik‐Aras, Junmei Miao Jonasson

TL;DR
This study explores how social capital relates to tooth loss in older adults across five low- and middle-income countries, finding varying associations depending on the country.
Contribution
The study is the first to compare social capital and edentulism across multiple low- and middle-income countries using community and individual-level data.
Findings
Low individual and community structural social capital are linked to higher odds of edentulism in China.
In South Africa, low individual cognitive social capital is negatively associated with edentulism.
No significant associations were found in Mexico and India.
Abstract
Although social capital (SC) has received growing attention in public health, no research has yet compared how SC and oral health are associated in diverse contexts. This cross‐sectional study aims to examine the association of community and individual‐level SC with edentulism among adults aged 50 and above in five low‐ and middle‐income countries (LMICs). Data are from SAGE‐wave 1 (2007–2010), including 27,676 participants aged 50 years or older from China (N = 12,830), Ghana (N = 4261), India (N = 6040), Mexico (N = 1327), and South Africa (N = 3218). The primary outcome was self‐reported edentulism. Cognitive and structural SC were used to measure SC at the individual and community levels. The association between SC dimensions and oral health was investigated using a two‐level multilevel logistic regression. Multilevel analysis revealed that low individual and community structural…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDental Health and Care Utilization · Health disparities and outcomes · Food Security and Health in Diverse Populations
