A recent collaborative study has revealed that the world's poor people cannot afford to buy a fluoride toothpaste.
A recent collaborative study has revealed that the world's poorest people cannot afford to buy a fluoride toothpaste.
The team, which includes Ann Goldman of the School of Public Health and Health Services at the George Washington University in Washington D.C., Robert Yee and Christopher Holmgren of the World Health Organization Collaborating Centre at Radboud University Medical Centre in Nijmegen, The Netherlands, and Habib Benzian of the FDI World Dental Federation, has revealed that the poorest populations of developing countries have the least access to affordable toothpaste.The findings are based on a study, in which they compared the relative affordability of fluoride toothpaste in 48 countries.
Fluoride toothpaste is the most widely used method of preventing dental decay, but currently only 12.5 percent of the world benefits from it.
According to the researchers, the low-use of fluoride toothpaste is due to its cost, which is too high in some parts of the world.
This study is the first to attempt to quantify the affordability of toothpaste across the globe.
For the study, questionnaires regarding the cost of fluoride toothpaste were completed by dental associations, non-government oral health organisations and individuals around the world.
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Researchers found that in different income groups in various countries, as the per capita income decreased, the proportion of income needed to purchase a year's supply of toothpaste increased; the poorest in each country being the hardest hit.
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Researchers have suggested that this can be done by exempting fluoride toothpaste from taxation, encouraging the local manufacture of fluoride toothpaste and persuading multinational manufacturers to implement different pricing policies for poorer countries.
The study is published in BioMed Central's open access journal Globalization and Health.
Source-ANI
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