@article{Dieng_Kanouté_Lombrail_Diouf_Azogui-Levy_2022, title={Characteristics of oral health literacy in Senegal: A cross-sectional study among women in the Department of Pikine}, volume={13}, url={https://publichealthinafrica.org/jphia/article/view/2114}, DOI={10.4081/jphia.2022.2114}, abstractNote={<p>Senegal having a significant prevalence of socially differentiated oral diseases, oral health literacy (OHL), an individual and social resource, should be considered alongside a remedial response. This work aimed to analyze women’s OHL characteristics. A cross-sectional study on 315 women in Pikine County was carried out, using the Oral Health Literacy-Adult Questionnaire (OHL-AQ) for the OHL data collection and a questionnaire for the women’s socioeconomic characteristics data. These women had an OHL average score of 6.5±3.1 and a median of 6. Among them, 56.5% had a seemingly low OHL level, a little over 68.9% had a score above the median as regards the “listening, communication and understanding” aspect, 58.4% to “decision making”, 55.2% to “understanding numbers” and 33% to “reading and understanding”. According to a multivariate analysis, secondary and higher educated women (p<0.001) with an active social network (p<0.023), in a wealthy household (p<0.0001) and of nuclear household type (p<0.036) had a higher OHL level. Women in Pikine have low OHL and are from working- class households. Therefore, oral health policies must take into account the women’s social network contribution to the OHL improvement.</p>}, number={2}, journal={Journal of Public Health in Africa}, author={Dieng, Serigne Ndame and Kanouté, Aïda and Lombrail, Pierre and Diouf, Massamba and Azogui-Levy, Sylvie}, year={2022}, month={Jul.} }