Articles

Using focus groups to design systems science models that promote oral health equity

Kum, Susan S.; Northridge, Mary E.; Metcalf, Sara S.

Background
While the US population overall has experienced improvements in oral health over the past 60 years, oral diseases remain among the most common chronic conditions across the life course. Further, lack of access to oral health care contributes to profound and enduring oral health inequities worldwide. Vulnerable and underserved populations who commonly lack access to oral health care include racial/ethnic minority older adults living in urban environments. The aim of this study was to use a systematic approach to explicate cause and effect relationships in creating a causal map, a type of concept map in which the links between nodes represent causality or influence.


Methods
To improve our mental models of the real world and devise strategies to promote oral health equity, methods including system dynamics, agent-based modeling, geographic information science, and social network simulation have been leveraged by the research team. The practice of systems science modeling is situated amidst an ongoing modeling process of observing the real world, formulating mental models of how it works, setting decision rules to guide behavior, and from these heuristics, making decisions that in turn affect the state of the real world. Qualitative data were obtained from focus groups conducted with community-dwelling older adults who self-identify as African American, Dominican, or Puerto Rican to elicit their lived experiences in accessing oral health care in their northern Manhattan neighborhoods.


Results
The findings of this study support the multi-dimensional and multi-level perspective of access to oral health care and affirm a theorized discrepancy in fit between available dental providers and patients. The lack of information about oral health at the community level may be compromising the use and quality of oral health care among racial/ethnic minority older adults.


Conclusions
Well-informed community members may fill critical roles in oral health promotion, as they are viewed as highly credible sources of information and recommendations for dental providers. The next phase of this research will involve incorporating the knowledge gained from this study into simulation models that will be used to explore alternative paths toward improving oral health and health care for racial/ethnic minority older adults.

Files

  • thumnail for 12903_2018_Article_560.pdf 12903_2018_Article_560.pdf application/pdf 749 KB Download File

Also Published In

Title
BMC Oral Health
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12903-018-0560-0

More About This Work

Academic Units
Sociomedical Sciences
Published Here
September 28, 2018

Notes

Oral public health, Dental public health, Oral health equity, Systems science, Agent-based modeling, Qualitative analysis, Focus group analysis, Racial/ethnic minorities, Older adults, Community-based oral health care