Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
Growth and Development of Negro Infants. VIII. Comparisonof the Deciduous Dentition in Negro and White Infants (A Preliminary Study). By
Angella D. Ferguson, M.D., Roland B. Scot,t, M.D.,
M.D., J. Pediatrics 50: 327-331, March, 1957.
and Harry
Bakwin,
This study was undertaken to compurc (I.) the time of eruption of the first
deciduoustooth
and (2) the number of teeth present at 1 year of age in Negro
and white infants.
The data were secured from two free well-baby clinics and from a private
pediatric practice.
These groups represrntrd
normal healthy infants from
families of low and middle socioeconomic levc!s in the Washington, T). C., mrtropolitan area. A group of white infants from npprr middle-income families in
New York City was observed in private practice and studied in a similar manner.
The method employed was largely cross sectional ; a few patients were followed
longitudinally.
Observations were made from 1953 through 1955. In this survey 808 Negro infants and 175 white infants were observed. Of the total number of Negro infant.s studied, 381 (47.5 per cent) were boys and 424 (52.4 per
cent) were girls.
In comparing the study groups, statistically significant diffcrrnces were
found in the following categories:
1. In thr Negro infants from private practice, bot,h sexes erupted the first
tooth at an earlier age than did the white infants from private pract,ice (a
difference of 2.8 weeks for boys and 3.9 werks for girls).
2. When the total Negro sample (clinic and private) was compared with
the white infants from private practice, it was found that the Negro femalr
infants erupted their first tooth at an earlier age (2.7 weeks) than the white
girls, and the white boys had more teeth (0.9 teeth) at 1 year than the Xcgro
boys. The white female infants also had more tert,h t,han the Negro fcmalc
infants at the end of one year; however, the difference was only 0.5 teeth.
3. In comparing the two groups of Negro infants (clinic and private),
significant differences were found only in the age of eruption of the first tooth,
that, is, the Negro male infants from private practice erupted the first tooth
2.7 weeks earlier than t,he Negro male infants from t,he clinic.
The Negro
female infants observed in private practice also erupted their first tooth earlirl
than the Negro female infants from the clinic, but the diffcrcnce was only
1.3 weeks and was not statistically significant.
With respect to the white infants, the boys erupted their first tooth 2.5
weeks earlier than did the girls (eruption ages were 29.1 and 31.6 weeks, respectively) and had 0.5 more teeth at 1 year of age. In other studies of white
infants from a similar socioeconomic level, an earlier eruption age in boys as
compared to girls was also reported.
In comparing the two groups of Negro infants from middle and low soctioeconomic levels (that is, private and clinic), the mean eruption times are earlier
for the infants from the middle-class socioeconomic environment.
However, in
a comparison of the combined Negro sample (middle and low socioeconomic
groups) with the white infants from a middle socioeconomic level, the eruption age of first teeth for both male and female Negro infants is earlier than that
found for white infants.
With respect t,o white infants, it is also interesting
to note that although the first tooth erupted at a later age, t,hese infants had
more teeth at 1 year (a difference of 0.9 teeth in males and 0.5 teeth in females) than Negro infant,s.
It is possible that a nat,ural tendency (racial or genetic) toward accelerated
eruption in the Negro may compensate for unfavorable environmental
(nutrit ional) needs.
Similarll\-, when tlio two racial groups 217 compa~~l at thtfi c~ntl 0) ilrcb firs1
year of life, the nutritional
advantages of the white infants will tflnd to owi~II owr~e?.
compensate slightly for a natural gpnotic, lag in curly d(9tition.
the white infant,s from private practice had a signifkantl~
greater
JlUIrlb~J
of teeth at the end of the first ycwr than tllcl Negro infants fronr
thv
clinic2
(low socioc~conomic lerc.1 1.
The Effect
l,cgislation,
American
Dental
Tax Regulations
on Dentists.;:
Couttcil
ott
dissociation.
On
,%pd
3, the
lntcrnal HcveJ~uo
Scrvicc
issued
il JIW
sot ot JTgUliJtiOlJX
governing expenses which ma,v be deducted from lc~l~al income tas by persons engaged in busincsscs arid professions. The new rcbgulations w~c puhlishccl
in full in~the Federal Hfyistrr
for April 5, lfL58.
The sections of the new regulations governing traveling cxprnscs, C~S~CWWS
for education and professional expenses ilr( of special importance to dentists.
Section 1.162-5 confirms specifically the dentists right to deduct the cost involved in attending educational courses dcsigned to improvcl his skill and Icarninp
That section of thcl
within a field or fields of dentistrv which hc practicts.
rrgulation, howc>vrr, spc~cifically tlcnivs ;I deduction for tllc> c*ost of iIll tdncational
course designed to qualify a dcxntist to bccomc a spc~cialist.
The Internal Rcvrnuc Service has announc(~d that amc~d~~ returns Lor the
years 1955, 1956 and 1957 may 1~ filctl by a person who took rtlucational WUIS~S
during those \-ears, if those coursers m~i the t c>stsof S(kction 1,161L:i ant1 t hr>
person did not include the cost of the COIIIW 0: couts(+ 21sil dcyluction.