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BMC Oral Health Aug 2023The timely and appropriate utilization of dental health care is essential to the prevention and accurate treatment of oral diseases. Therefore, it is crucial that... (Review)
Review
BACKGROUND
The timely and appropriate utilization of dental health care is essential to the prevention and accurate treatment of oral diseases. Therefore, it is crucial that managers, health professionals and healthcare providers be fully aware of the predictors encouraging the utilization of dental services and reduce social inequalities. In this scoping review, we aimed to analyze the published articles and reports to find out the factors associated with dental services utilization and the comprehensiveness of the applied models among general adult populations.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
This scoping study was based on the 5-steps of Arksey and O'Malley framework. Keywords were selected under two main concepts: determinants of dental care utilization and the concept of the applied models. Searches were conducted in some electronic databses including PubMed, Google Scholar and Scopus with variations, and a combination of the keywords under the two main afore-mentioned concepts. All the relevant articles reporting the utilization of dental care and its potential predictors among adult populations were chosen. No restrictions involving terms of study time, location or methodological aspects of oral health utilization were considered. Using tables and charts mapping, we tried to group the studies based on the year of their publication, geographic distribution, the range of included indices and the type of their measurement. Also, a directed content analysis method was used to investigate the comprehensiveness of the studies in regard to considering the determinant factors at different levels suggested by the Andesen model.
RESULTS
Fifty-two articles were included in the analysis. Thirty-six (69%) had been published between 2016 and 2020. The United States had conducted the most research in this scope. About 30% of studies had mentioned all three domains of demographics, social structure and beliefs, simultaneously. To evaluate the enabling factors, in 84.61% and 59.61% of studies, the income levels and insurance feature were assessed, respectively. 57.69% of the retrieved studies considered the perceived need features and 38.46% referred to the evaluated ones. The dental services utilization, in terms of the last visit during the "past 12 months", was assessed more commonly. Only 11.54% of studies did evaluate the contextual characteristics and about 71.15% of articles were relatively comprehensive.
CONCLUSION
Overall, it seems that in most of the studies, not all of the determinant factors at different levels of the Andersen model have been considered. In order to discover the conceptual linkages and feedback loops of the model, it is essential to conduct more comprehensive research in the future.
Topics: Humans; Adult; Awareness; Facilities and Services Utilization; Health Personnel; Dental Care
PubMed: 37635224
DOI: 10.1186/s12903-023-03323-1 -
Primary Dental Journal Jun 2022There has been much research relating to stressors in the dental environment and concerns over dentists' health and wellbeing. The determinants of dentists' health and...
BACKGROUND
There has been much research relating to stressors in the dental environment and concerns over dentists' health and wellbeing. The determinants of dentists' health and wellbeing within the UK include factors, such as healthcare systems and regulation; factors, such as job specification and workplace characteristics; and factors, such as personal aspects, professional career level, and personal and professional relationships. Given the challenges in dentistry, research is needed to investigate the key determinants relating to the health and wellbeing of clinical dental care professionals (DCPs) nationally.
AIM
To review the literature on the key determinants of health and wellbeing among dental hygienists, dental therapists, clinical dental technicians, and orthodontic therapists in the UK.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
A systematic review of the literature was conducted across seven databases. The records were screened by title, abstract and full text based on the study inclusion criteria. Extraction of data and a qualitative synthesis of the included studies was performed. A mixed methods appraisal tool was used to quality assess for risk of bias.
RESULTS
Twelve studies were included in this review, eleven of which were medium to high quality (5*, 4*) and one low quality (2*). Ten studies focused on dental therapists, and/or hygienists, with only one each on orthodontic therapists and clinical dental technicians. Job satisfaction and professional careers were the primary factors explored in the included studies and clearly identified as determinants of health and wellbeing. However, there was evidence of these being associated and linked with a range of determinants at macro-, meso-, and micro-levels, with a general lack of evidence on the overall health and wellbeing.
CONCLUSION
There is currently very limited evidence on the key determinants of health and wellbeing of clinical DCPs within the UK, but the available evidence maps to the same domains as dentists. Further well conducted research examining the overall health and wellbeing is required, with consideration of the full matrix of possible factors.
Topics: Dental Care; Humans; Job Satisfaction; Workplace
PubMed: 35658664
DOI: 10.1177/20501684221101663 -
PloS One 2022Many preventive approaches in dentistry aim to improve oral health through behavioural instruction or intervention concerning oral health behaviour. However, it is still...
Many preventive approaches in dentistry aim to improve oral health through behavioural instruction or intervention concerning oral health behaviour. However, it is still unknown which factors have the highest impact on oral health behaviours, such as toothbrushing or regular dental check-ups. Various external and internal individual factors such as education, experience with dentists or influence by parents could be relevant. Therefore, the present observational study investigated the influence of these factors on self-reported oral heath behaviour. One hundred and seventy participants completed standardized questionnaires about dental anxiety (Dental Anxiety Scale (DAS), and dental self-efficacy perceptions (dSEP)). They also answered newly composed questionnaires on oral hygiene behaviours and attitudes, current and childhood dental experiences as well as parental oral hygiene education and care. Four independent factors, namely attitude towards oral hygiene, attitude towards one's teeth, sense of care and self-inspection of one's teeth were extracted from these questionnaires by rotating factor analysis. The results of the questionnaires were correlated by means of linear regressions. Dental anxiety was related to current negative emotions when visiting a dentist and negative dental-related experiences during childhood. High DAS scores, infantile and current negative experiences showed significant negative correlations with the attitude towards oral hygiene and one's teeth. Dental anxiety and current negative dental experiences reduced participants' dental self-efficacy perceptions as well as the self-inspection of one's teeth. While parental care positively influenced the attitude towards one's teeth, dental self-efficacy perceptions significantly correlated with attitude towards oral hygiene, self-inspection of one's teeth and parental care. Dental anxiety, dental experiences, parents' care for their children's oral hygiene and dental self-efficacy perceptions influence the attitude towards oral hygiene and one's own oral cavity as well as the autonomous control of one's own dental health. Therefore, oral hygiene instruction and the development of patient-centred preventive approaches should consider these factors.
Topics: Adolescent; Adult; Attitude to Health; Dental Care; Female; Health Behavior; Health Education, Dental; Humans; Male; Middle Aged; Oral Hygiene; Self Report; Toothbrushing; Young Adult
PubMed: 35202439
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0264306 -
European Journal of Paediatric Dentistry Mar 2024Dentists, especially paediatric dentists, should inform their young patients of the treatment to be undertaken in an appropriate and comprehensive manner. In 1989, the...
Dentists, especially paediatric dentists, should inform their young patients of the treatment to be undertaken in an appropriate and comprehensive manner. In 1989, the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child (United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child - UNCRC - https://www.unicef. org/child-rights-convention/convention-text) was adopted, comprising of 54 articles concerning every aspect of a child's life, notably health, including oral health. More than 30 years after the Declaration of the Rights of the Child, both health professionals and parents still struggle to grasp this subject, resulting in its scarce application in daily practice. Children's rights have also been mentioned several times in medical and dental literature, reminding health professionals that the approach to young patients must be age-appropriate. The clinician must learn to consider children as the main protagonists in the choices concerning their health, and they must be aware of their rights from an early age. Particularly in the field of dentistry, it is a matter of guaranteeing the best dental care for every child with particular attention to the indigent or disabled (Article 23). In addition to this, the most effective and up-to-date treatment must be proposed, avoiding unnecessary extractions and favouring conservative therapy that can guarantee a better quality of life in the future, while reducing treatment under general anaesthesia. In current practice, consent to treatment is often demanded from the parents, without involving the child. However, every child has the right to freely express their opinion and be actively involved in any matter that concerns them. This opinion is expressed in different ways according to age and stage of maturity. Pictures, drawings, cartoons and videos can help the healthcare provider when explaining procedures to the young patient, thus allowing them to obtain consent and cooperation. In individual countries, it would be advisable to have guidelines that facilitate the child's active consent to health treatments. So, what happens in your country?
Topics: Humans; Quality of Life; United Nations; Parents; Dentists; Dental Care
PubMed: 38426296
DOI: 10.23804/ejpd.2024.25.01.01 -
Journal of Public Health Dentistry Mar 2022Like other areas of health, structural racism has a deep impact on oral health and is a key driver of racial inequities in access to care and outcomes. Racism also... (Review)
Review
Like other areas of health, structural racism has a deep impact on oral health and is a key driver of racial inequities in access to care and outcomes. Racism also structures the relationship between oral health and access to economic opportunities. As a result, communities of color, American Indian/Alaska Native (AI/AN) communities, and low-income populations experience the highest rates of the health, social, and economic costs of dental disease. This is compounded by issues of community-level dental fear/trauma resulting from receiving itinerate care. Dentistry has long struggled to equitably distribute care and diversify its overwhelmingly white and affluent workforce, resulting in many communities not having access to providers who represent their identity and/or live in their community. While multi-generational lack of access to dental care is not unique to Alaska, Alaska Native communities are the home to a reimagined, community-centered care delivery system that is improving health outcomes. For almost two decades, AI/AN leaders have recruited and trained community members to serve as dental therapists-dental team members who offer routine and preventive care responsive to local geographic and cultural/community norms. As members of the communities they serve, dental therapists are fluent in the language and cultural norms of their patients, improving patient-provider trust, access to care, and oral health outcomes. The communities that dental therapists serve are also now investing money and training in their community members, building educational opportunities, and professional wage jobs and directly countering the economic impact structural racism has on oral health.
Topics: Alaska Natives; Dental Care; Health Services Accessibility; Humans; Oral Health; Racism; Systemic Racism
PubMed: 35014051
DOI: 10.1111/jphd.12499 -
BMC Oral Health Jul 2022Satisfaction with dental services can provide valuable insights into aspects of quality including access as well as changes in this over time. In the UK publicly funded...
BACKGROUND
Satisfaction with dental services can provide valuable insights into aspects of quality including access as well as changes in this over time. In the UK publicly funded dental services are ostensibly delivered by private sector general dental practitioners for whom private patients represent an opportunity cost to the provision of care to public patients. This study examined changes in satisfaction as economic circumstances and policy changed in Britain between 1998 and 2019.
METHODS
Data were taken from successive waves of the British Social Attitudes Survey a representative cross-sectional survey of the population between 1998 and 2019. Descriptive statistics and a series of logistic regression analyses were used to examine the relationships between satisfaction and a range of socio-demographic characteristics over time.
RESULTS
37,328 usable responses were extracted from the survey spanning 21 years of data. Over the course of the survey approximately 71% of the sample was very satisfied, satisfied or neither satisfied nor dissatisfied with publicly funded dental services. Satisfaction fell at the outset of the study period but rose following the economic downturn from 2008 which coincided with increased use of publicly funded services. Differences were evident in satisfaction between older versus younger respondents, more affluent versus less affluent respondents and better educated versus less well-educated respondents. Satisfaction did not appear to change in response to policy changes.
CONCLUSION
Satisfaction is an important outcome of service provision. Policies aiming to improve satisfaction with publicly funded dental care in the UK must take account of the competing demands on dentists' time from private patients. At times of economic expansion or when supply has been disrupted, these may be particularly acute and require specific interventions to improve access for those who depend on public services.
Topics: Cross-Sectional Studies; Dental Care; Dentists; Humans; Personal Satisfaction; Professional Role; United Kingdom
PubMed: 35883074
DOI: 10.1186/s12903-022-02343-7 -
Australian Dental Journal Mar 2021Periodontal treatment may be a useful adjunct to medical management of diabetes; however, oral health has not been integrated into multidisciplinary diabetes care in...
BACKGROUND
Periodontal treatment may be a useful adjunct to medical management of diabetes; however, oral health has not been integrated into multidisciplinary diabetes care in Australia. This study aimed to understand the needs of patients and staff at a diabetes clinic to inform a prototype of integrated dental and diabetes care.
METHODS
Quantitative and qualitative data were collected from patients and staff at West Moreton Diabetes Clinic (WMDC) between September-October 2019. Clinical information, survey responses and dental screening results were analysed for 41 patients. Semi-structured interviews were held with six patients and a focus group with seven staff.
RESULTS
Most patients (83%) had not seen a dentist in the previous year. Of the 37 patients with remaining natural teeth, 84% required periodontal assessment and 46% had multiple carious lesions. Unmet treatment needs and rates of access were similar for private and public dental patients. Staff and patients reported high levels of support for incorporation of dental care at WMDC.
CONCLUSIONS
Integrating oral health into diabetes management is well-supported by patients and staff to address significant unmet dental needs for both public and private dental patients. Incorporating dental screening/services within diabetes clinics may increase uptake and improve awareness of its importance in diabetes management.
Topics: Australia; Dental Care; Diabetes Mellitus; Humans; Oral Health
PubMed: 33159320
DOI: 10.1111/adj.12804 -
Journal of Dentistry Jun 2024This article examines the past, present and future of primary care dentistry. It provides a historical background of primary care dentistry and describes stages of its... (Review)
Review
This article examines the past, present and future of primary care dentistry. It provides a historical background of primary care dentistry and describes stages of its evolution. It further reviews the purpose and mission of contemporary primary care dentistry and outlines a vision for the development of primary care dentistry in the future. The type and extent of innovations and technological advances that have impacted - and improved - primary care dentistry revolutionising clinical activities, ranging from early computerised tomography to modern digital systems and workflows are summarised. A discussion of current scientific evidence base pertinent to primary care dentistry highlighting the need for 'effectiveness' rather than 'efficacy' studies is included in order to provide research data pertinent to the primary care dentistry setting where most dental patients receive most of their care most of the time.
Topics: Humans; Dental Care; Dentistry; Forecasting; History, 20th Century; History, 21st Century; Primary Health Care
PubMed: 38677403
DOI: 10.1016/j.jdent.2024.105007 -
BMC Oral Health Oct 2023Oral conditions such as gingivitis and periodontitis are correlated with adverse pregnancy outcomes such as preeclampsia, preterm birth and low birth weight. Oral...
BACKGROUND
Oral conditions such as gingivitis and periodontitis are correlated with adverse pregnancy outcomes such as preeclampsia, preterm birth and low birth weight. Oral health-related unfavourable beliefs can have negative influences on oral health behaviours including hesitation in accessing preventative dental treatments and dental service utilization. The objective of this systematic review was to examine unfavourable beliefs that expectant or new mothers frequently hold about oral health and the safety of dental care during pregnancy.
METHODS
An electronic database search on PubMed, Scopus, CINAHL, and MEDLINE (Ovid) followed by forward and backward citation tracing of the included studies was conducted. All English primary studies regardless of the year of publication were independently screened by two reviewers to identify studies addressing unfavourable beliefs about oral health and dental care during pregnancy. The CLARITY tool was applied to assess the risk of bias in the included studies.
RESULTS
Out of a total of 5766 records, 39 quantitative and six qualitative studies met the inclusion criteria. The commonly held unfavourable beliefs were regarding the safety of dental services utilization and dental treatment procedures, the adverse impacts of pregnancy on oral health, and oral hygiene necessity during pregnancy. The most discussed unfavourable beliefs included "pregnant women lose their teeth because of pregnancy" (n = 18), "dental treatments are not safe and harm the fetus" (n = 17), and "the developing baby absorbs calcium from the mother's teeth" (n = 14).
CONCLUSIONS
Unfavourable beliefs about oral health and dental care utilization are common among pregnant women and new mothers. The literature suggests that a low level of oral health knowledge and seeking information from social networks can contribute to such beliefs. This has implications for health promotion.
Topics: Female; Humans; Pregnancy; Infant, Newborn; Oral Health; Premature Birth; Pregnant Women; Pregnancy Outcome; Dental Care
PubMed: 37840149
DOI: 10.1186/s12903-023-03439-4 -
Community Dental Health May 2023Dementia is a major public health challenge, and its impact on oral health and oral healthcare delivery can be drastic. More people are living with dementia, and the... (Review)
Review
Dementia is a major public health challenge, and its impact on oral health and oral healthcare delivery can be drastic. More people are living with dementia, and the proportion of people living longer is growing. This review summarises dementia and its impact on oral health, dental care access and dental services. People living with dementia (PLwD) face a substantial risk of developing oral diseases and experiencing orofacial pain. PLwD face many barriers to dental care. When care is accessed, there can be practical and ethical challenges in receiving person-centred treatment. PLwD with the most complex needs are increasing in number and more are likely to require specialist care. Recommendations are made regarding preventative care, dental care access, domiciliary care, workforce planning and treatment decision-making. Those commissioning and facilitating dental care for PLwD should ensure that suitably trained staff are available in accessible services to plan the necessary care and provide active treatment where appropriate. It is almost inevitable that more care will need to be commissioned to support this growing patient group. This need should be anticipated and planned for at a population and policy level to reduce the detrimental impacts of oral diseases and orofacial pain for PLwD.
Topics: Humans; Dementia; Delivery of Health Care; Oral Health; Dental Care; United Kingdom
PubMed: 37067349
DOI: 10.1922/CDH_00279Geddis-Regan06