1. Relationship between amount of overtime work and untreated decayed teeth in male financial workers in Japan
- Author
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Yoichi Ishizuka, Atsushi Takayanagi, Hideyuki Kamijyo, Naoki Sugihara, Koichi Yoshino, and Seitaro Suzuki
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Financial workers ,Databases, Factual ,Financial Management ,Original ,Interprofessional Relations ,Health Behavior ,Overtime work hours ,Oral health behavior ,Comorbidity ,Workload ,Dental Caries ,Oral hygiene ,03 medical and health sciences ,Interpersonal relationship ,0302 clinical medicine ,Job stress ,Japan ,Risk Factors ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Work Schedule Tolerance ,Tooth loss ,Medicine ,Humans ,Dental Care ,Workplace ,Screening procedures ,Finance ,Snacking ,business.industry ,Untreated decayed teeth ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Overtime ,030206 dentistry ,Odds ratio ,Middle Aged ,Oral Hygiene ,030210 environmental & occupational health ,Confidence interval ,stomatognathic diseases ,Logistic Models ,Socioeconomic Factors ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
Objective: Continuous or frequent overtime work has been shown to have harmful effects on human health. Meanwhile, one of the main reasons for tooth loss is caries. The aim of this study was to assess the relationship between overtime work and untreated decayed teeth in male financial workers. Methods: The participants were recruited by applying screening procedures to a pool of Japanese registrants in an online database. Participants filled out a questionnaire about their oral health, behavior, and working conditions. Participants comprised a total of 951 financial male workers, aged 25-64 years. Results: The likelihood of tooth decay increased with amount of overtime work (p=0.002). After adjusting for age, income, educational background, oral hygiene behavior, snacking behavior, regular dental visitation, bad interpersonal relationships at work, and smoking habit, a multiple logistic regression analysis found that participants with 45-80 h of overtime work (odds ratio [OR], 2.56; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.23-5.33) or over 80 h of overtime work (OR, 3.01; 95% CI, 1.13-7.97) were more likely to have untreated tooth decay. The percentage of participants who gave "too busy with work" as the reason for leaving decayed teeth untreated increased with amount of overtime (p
- Published
- 2017