# From Disease to Illness: Reframing Periodontitis Through an Anthropological Lens

**Authors:** Carlo Galli, Chiara Moretti, Elena Calciolari, Nikolaos Donos

PMC · DOI: 10.1111/jre.70051 · 2025-11-07

## TL;DR

This paper reframes periodontitis as a complex issue shaped by social and cultural factors, not just a medical condition.

## Contribution

It introduces an anthropological perspective to periodontal health, emphasizing lived experience and systemic inequities.

## Key findings

- Periodontitis is influenced by social, economic, and structural forces beyond clinical diagnosis.
- Cultural assumptions shape patient decisions and public perceptions of oral health.
- An integrated model combining anthropology and periodontics can lead to more equitable health outcomes.

## Abstract

While periodontitis is globally recognized as a significant public health problem, its common definition as a plaque‐based inflammatory condition is incomplete. Disease progression, personal experience, and treatment are shaped by social, economic, and structural forces largely invisible in clinical practice and policy. A lens from medical anthropology helps us see periodontitis as more than a clinical diagnosis; it is a lived experience, deeply entangled with a person's social world. The physical reality of inflammation translates into profound emotional distress—from the shame and stigma of bleeding gums and gingival recession to the tangible fear of tooth loss. This personal suffering is often intensified by a societal focus on individual blame, which masks systemic barriers like poor insurance coverage and the simple lack of local care. Ultimately, the cultural language and assumptions surrounding oral health—what anthropologists term explanatory models and semantic networks—powerfully influence everything from a patient's decisions to the public's perception of the disease itself. We argue for a more culturally attuned approach to periodontal health—one that prioritizes prevention, centers the patient's lived experience, and confronts the systemic roots of oral health inequities. By integrating the insights of anthropology with the science of periodontics, we believe we can build a more complete model of care that leads to equitable health outcomes, creating policies and practices that acknowledge both microbial causes and patients' lived realities.

Periodontitis is at once a disease, an illness, and a sickness—where biological pathology, lived experience, and social meaning intersect. The proposed integrated model links upstream structural actions with downstream clinical and educational practices through feedback loops that promote equitable and effective prevention and care.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** periodontitis (MONDO:0005076)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** bleeding gums (MESH:C537732), tooth loss (MESH:D016388), gingival recession (MESH:D005889), inflammation (MESH:D007249), Periodontitis (MESH:D010518)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12961375/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12961375