Fundamental Instruments for Dental Trepidation Discovery by Dental Specialists
Received: 03-Apr-2023 / Manuscript No. jdpm-23-97323 / Editor assigned: 05-Apr-2023 / PreQC No. jdpm-23-97323 (PQ) / Reviewed: 19-Apr-2023 / QC No. jdpm-23-97323 / Revised: 21-Apr-2023 / Manuscript No. jdpm-23-97323 (R) / Published Date: 28-Apr-2023 DOI: 10.4172/jdpm.1000150
Abstract
Objective: Dental anxiety is common, but it is frequently overlooked. COVID-19 has been a health care concern since 2020. The aim of this study was to examine patients' and dentists' perceptions of dental fear. Another objective was to validate a color-coded device for calculating dental fear. It was determined how COVID-19 affected fear and attendance.
Method: In the spring of 2020 and 2021, a cross-sectional study was conducted at the primary urgent dental care in Oulu, Finland, following the first (T1) and third (T2) waves of the pandemic. A novel "traffic light" color coding system for dental dread and the Modified Dental Anxiety Scale (MDAS) were used to collect data for analyses (CCF). The impact of COVID-19 on dental anxiety and attendance was assessed with the assistance of both structured and open-ended questions. The surveys were completed by 273 anonymous respondents.
Result: 106 (38.8%) and 167 (61.2%) of the participants visited the dentist in T1 and T2, respectively. On average, they were 45.1 years old. 10.6% of respondents reported having a MDAS score of 19 or higher for severe fear. 87% of people who had severe dental anxiety selected the color red in the CCF "traffic light" system. The members' and dental specialists' appraisals of dental fear were just feebly corresponded (P .001), and there was no concurrence with the red code (Cohen's kappa esteem = 0.035). For those with the most serious self-detailed dental not entirely set in stone by the MDAS, Coronavirus greatestly affected dental participation and dental fear.
Conclusion: Color-coded traffic lights appear to be effective in detecting severe dental phobia and are simple to operate. Given that it may be difficult for dentists to identify dental fear, they might be useful tools. The COVID-19 pandemic has made dental care more difficult for those who are most afraid.
Keywords
Dental anxiety; Dental pathology; COVID-19; Dental care
Introduction
In spite of the way that dental fear is normal dental specialists every now and again slip through the cracks by it. It is common knowledge that age and gender influence the prevalence of dental phobia. Additionally, it changes in distinct ways over time for male and female patients. Scales like the Modified Dental Anxiety Scale (MDAS), Facial Image Scale (FIS), and Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) can be used to measure dental fear. Dental apprehension screening has been finished with only one request. In the past, images with various codes or a "traffic light system" have been used in dental16 and medical care to help classify patients as high-risk or to indicate the level of pain, but they have not yet been used to identify patients who are afraid of the dentist. Especially on the off chance that a patient has a serious feeling of dread toward the dental specialist, polls, discussion, and conduct perception are prompted [1]. Keep in mind that it can be challenging to identify dental fear, even for experienced dentists. The COVID-19 pandemic may have affected dental visits and procedures because people were afraid of getting sick. The pandemic may have increased dental phobia among oral surgery patients, dental emergency patients, and dentistry students, according to some evidence. The study's objective was to determine how primary care patients identify dental fear. The particular objective was to investigate the connections between's the notable dental trepidation scales Facial Picture Scale (FIS) and Changed Dental Uneasiness Scale (MDAS), as well as a 3-point scale or "traffic signals" variety codes for dental trepidation (CCF), among grown-ups who were coming for critical short term dental consideration [2] and were sorted by age and orientation. Exploring the connection between patients' selfreported dental trepidation and dental specialists' evaluations was another express objective. Examinations were likewise directed into what the Coronavirus pandemic meant for participation and dental nervousness.
Result
Patients seeking dental urgent care at the primary health care clinic in the Finnish city of Oulu comprised the study population in this cross-sectional study. All willing patients over the age of 15 who met the requirements for urgent dental care were invited to participate in this survey during their dental appointment. This convenience sample included 340 patients, and 277 (81.5%) of them agreed to participate [3]. If half of members in this study announced having moderate or serious dental fear, then 138 members were expected to arrive at the force of 80% and certainty time period: Dental anxiety was mentioned by 27% of Finns in previous surveys. 8 In Finland, the first study sample (T1) was obtained following the so-called first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic, which occurred in the months of June and July 2020; the second study sample (T2) was obtained following the third wave, which occurred in the months of April and May 2021. Both of these instances occurred during the same time period. Various work days were addressed by the review dates. The study group did not include patients who needed immediate emergency dental or medical care because of a serious dental injury (n = 1), who might have needed COVID-19 testing (n = 1), or who were not considered urgent dental patients [4]. Both the written material for the study process and the quizzes were easily comprehended by all of the enrolled participants. The completed provided the data that were used in the analysis (n = 273) [5].
Discussion
During T1, 167 (61.2 percent) of the 273 study participants went to the dentist, and 106 (38.8 percent) did so during T2. There were 143 women, or 52.4 percent, more than men (129, or 47.3 percent) [6]. The gender and age distribution of the participants at T1 and T2 (P =.508) 17.1 years for SD; T2 mean, 43.9 years; 15.2 years for SD; P =.339) did not differ significantly from one another statistically. Overall, 10.6% of people reported having an MDAS 19 [7]. Men and women reported equal levels of dental fear using the MDAS and FIS scores at T1 and T2. MDAS sum scores differed significantly between the various age groups after the initial wave (T1; P =.021). The youngest participants reported experiencing dental fear twice as frequently as the oldest. There was no discernible difference between the average self-reported dental dread according to the MDAS sum scores at T1 and T2 (T1 mean, 11.0; SD, 5.1; T2 mean, 11.6; SD, 5.3; P=0.411). Albeit the most established age bunch would in general give the most ideal FIS appraisals at T2, each of the three age bunches had comparative FIS scores. Self-reported CCF green scores of 5 to 9 on the MDAS were consistent in 77.6% of patients. MDAS scores below 19 were found in 86.7 percent of patients who described their dental anxiety as CCF red or "extreme fear." Self-reported red codes for extreme dental phobia and MDAS total score 19 were found to be nearly perfect (0.880). One in five people who evaluated their dental fear using the color code green, or "no or low level of dental fear," indicated significant dental fear, according to their MDAS scores (10-18). The MDAS 19 indicates that none of the patients with a green code had severe dental phobia. Overall, the CCF and MDAS sum scores were in good agreement (women: 0.761; men: 0.703). The patients' and dentists' color codes were only slightly in agreement (0.087). There was no agreement between the red color and anything else after dichotomization (men, p=0.035; p=0.034 for women). The green tone, which addresses low dental trepidation, had the most elevated understanding among patients' and dental specialists' appraisals of dental apprehension utilizing CCF. Cohen's kappa value revealed a slight agreement (=0.124) between the dentists' estimation and women's dental dread following the dichotomization of green color versus other [8-10]. (r=0.387) The men's agreement was reasonable. When color codes were divided into two groups (red and other; P.001), the lowest level of agreement between dentists' and patients' fear levels was severe dental fear, which was represented by both men and women with a red color code. In two instances, patients reported receiving a yellow rating, indicating mild anxiety, while dentists assigned a red code, indicating severe dental anxiety.
Conclusion
None of the patients who created a red code for themselves were correctly identified by the dentists. Green codes were given to 74 patients by dentists, indicating that they had little or no fear of the dentist, while 23 (31.1%) of them had moderate fear and 4 (5.4%) had severe fear. In 63.5% of the occasions, dental specialists accurately deciphered the green code. Members who had a MDAS score of 19 expressed that their dental fear expanded at T1 and especially at T2: 13,3 and 21,4 percent, respectively. There was a statistically significant difference (P.002) in the self-reported impact of COVID-19 on dental fear between T1 and T2. Members with insignificant or minimal dental uneasiness expressed that Coronavirus affected them at T1 (95.1%) or T2 (87.5%), individually. When compared to those with less dental anxiety, those who took COVID-19 at T1 had a significantly lower likelihood of seeking dental care (P =.013). At T1, 33.3% of people under the age of 19 with an MDAS score reported that the pandemic had reduced their need for dental care. Only 11.0% of participants said that people with no or little dental phobia were less likely to seek dental care. Despite the MDAS score, 82.6% of cases no longer sought dental care at T2 due to the pandemic. Self-reported influence on obtaining dental care was statistically significantly different between T1 and T2 due to COVID-19 (P =0.011).
Acknowledgement
None
Conflict of Interest
None
References
- Pohjola V, Lahti S, Vehkalahti MM, Tolvanen M, Hausen H (2007) Association between dental fear and dental attendance among adults in Finland. Acta Odontol Scand 65: 224-230.
- Liinavuori A, Tolvanen M, Pohjola V, Lahti S (2019) Longitudinal interrelationships between dental fear and dental attendance among adult Finns in 2000-2011. Community Dent Oral Epidemiol 47: 309-315.
- Hoglund M, Bagesund M, Shahnavaz S, Wardh I (2019) Evaluation of the ability of dental clinicians to rate dental anxiety. Eur J Oral Sci 127: 455-461.
- Klingberg G, Broberg AG (2007) Dental fear/anxiety and dental behaviour management problems in children and adolescents: a review of prevalence and concomitant psychological factors. Int J Paediatr Dent 17: 391-406.
- Humphris GM, Dyer TA, Robinson PG (2009) The modified dental anxiety scale: UK general public population norms in 2008 with further psychometrics and effects of age. BMC Oral Health 9: 20.
- Hagglin C, Carlsson SG, Hakeberg M (2013) On the dynamics of dental fear: dental or mental?. Eur J Oral Sci 121: 235-239.
- Liinavuori A, Tolvanen M, Pohjola V, Lahti S (2016) Changes in dental fear among Finnish adults: a national survey. Community Dent Oral Epidemiol 44: 128-134.
- Hagqvist O, Tolvanen M, Rantavuori K, Karlsson L, Karlsson H, et al. (2018) Short-term longitudinal changes in adult dental fear. Eur J Oral Sci 126: 300-306.
- Humphris GM, Freeman R, Campbell J, Tuutti H, D'Souza V (2000) Further evidence for the reliability and validity of the Modified Dental Anxiety Scale. Int Dent J 50: 367-370.
- Appukuttan D, Vinayagavel M, Tadepalli A (2014) Utility and validity of a single-item visual analog scale for measuring dental anxiety in clinical practice. J Oral Sci 56: 151-156.
Indexed at, Google Scholar, Crossref
Indexed at, Google Scholar, Crossref
Indexed at, Google Scholar, Crossref
Indexed at, Google Scholar, Crossref
Indexed at, Google Scholar, Crossref
Indexed at, Google Scholar, Crossref
Indexed at, Google Scholar, Crossref
Indexed at, Google Scholar, Crossref
Indexed at, Google Scholar, Crossref
Citation: Sharma P (2023) Fundamental Instruments for Dental Trepidation Discovery by Dental Specialists. J Dent Pathol Med 7: 150. DOI: 10.4172/jdpm.1000150
Copyright: © 2023 Sharma P. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Share This Article
Recommended Journals
Open Access Journals
Article Tools
Article Usage
- Total views: 600
- [From(publication date): 0-2023 - Nov 21, 2024]
- Breakdown by view type
- HTML page views: 522
- PDF downloads: 78