6 results on '"Rener Sitar, Ksenija"'
Search Results
2. Why Patients Visit Dentists – A Study in all World Health Organization Regions
- Author
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John, Mike T., primary, Sekulić, Stella, additional, Bekes, Katrin, additional, Al-Harthy, Mohammad H., additional, Michelotti, Ambra, additional, Reissmann, Daniel R., additional, Nikolovska, Julijana, additional, Sanivarapu, Sahityaveera, additional, Lawal, Folake B., additional, List, Thomas, additional, Peršić Kiršić, Sanja, additional, Strajnić, Ljiljana, additional, Casassus, Rodrigo, additional, Baba, Kazuyoshi, additional, Schimmel, Martin, additional, Amuasi, Ama, additional, Jayasinghe, Ruwan D., additional, Strujić-Porović, Sanela, additional, Peck, Christopher C., additional, Xie, Han, additional, Haugaard Bendixen, Karina, additional, Simancas Pallares, Miguel Angel, additional, Perez-Franco, Eka, additional, Naghibi Sistani, Mohammad Mehdi, additional, Valerio, Patricia, additional, Letunova, Natalia, additional, M. Nurelhuda, Nazik, additional, Bartlett, David W., additional, Oluwafemi, Ikeoluwa A., additional, Dghoughi, Saloua, additional, Ferreira, Joao N.A.R., additional, Chantaracherd, Pathamas, additional, and Rener-Sitar, Ksenija, additional
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- 2020
- Full Text
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3. Patient-Reported Outcome Measures for Adult Dental Patients: A Systematic Review
- Author
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Mittal, Hina, primary, John, Mike T., additional, Sekulić, Stella, additional, Theis-Mahon, Nicole, additional, and Rener-Sitar, Ksenija, additional
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- 2019
- Full Text
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4. Nonmalignant Oral Disease--Specific Dental Patient-Reported Outcome Measures for Adult Patients: A Systematic Review.
- Author
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Rener-Sitar K, John MT, Truong V, Tambe S, and Theis-Mahon N
- Subjects
- Adult, Facial Pain, Humans, Patient Reported Outcome Measures, Surveys and Questionnaires, Oral Health, Quality of Life
- Abstract
Objectives: Dental patient-reported outcome measures (dPROMs) can be differentiated into outcome measures for all oral diseases, so-called disease-generic dPROMs, and measures for specific oral diseases, so-called disease-specific dPROMs. The aim of this systematic review was to identify the psychometrically validated nonmalignant disease-specific dPROMs for adult patients and the dental patient-reported outcomes (dPROs) they measure., Methods: This systematic review searched Ovid MEDLINE, Embase, PsycINFO, and the Cochrane databases along with hand searching, through July 28, 2020, to identify original articles of English language, multi-item dPROMs for adult dental patients with a specific oral disease, condition, or oral manifestations of systemic diseases. We analyzed the questionnaires for content commonalities, the reference or recall period, and the dimensionality., Results: We retrieved 4228 unique references and identified 34 questionnaires; of which, 31 questionnaires captured impacts from oral diseases or conditions and three from oral manifestations of systemic diseases. All questionnaires together contained 102 dPROMs, measuring 75 dPROs. Oral health-related quality of life was a broader dPRO, which was measured by 24 dPROMs. The 74 narrower dPROs were measured by 78 dPROMs. The dPRO names suggested that essentially four dPROs were measured: Oral Function (N = 19), Orofacial Pain (N = 7), Orofacial Appearance (N = 11), and Psychosocial Impact (N = 37)., Conclusions: Many psychometrically validated tools (N = 102) are available to measure the impact of specific nonmalignant oral disease on patients. While these tools intend to measure the particular patient-perceived impact profile of the oral disease, all tools measure in essence only four, more general concepts - the dimensions of oral health-related quality of life., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2021
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5. Why Patients Visit Dentists - A Study in all World Health Organization Regions.
- Author
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John MT, Sekulić S, Bekes K, Al-Harthy MH, Michelotti A, Reissmann DR, Nikolovska J, Sanivarapu S, Lawal FB, List T, Peršić Kiršić S, Strajnić L, Casassus R, Baba K, Schimmel M, Amuasi A, Jayasinghe RD, Strujić-Porović S, Peck CC, Xie H, Haugaard Bendixen K, Simancas Pallares MA, Perez-Franco E, Naghibi Sistani MM, Valerio P, Letunova N, Nurelhuda NM, Bartlett DW, Oluwafemi IA, Dghoughi S, Ferreira JNAR, Chantaracherd P, and Rener-Sitar K
- Subjects
- Dentists, Humans, Surveys and Questionnaires, World Health Organization, Oral Health, Quality of Life
- Abstract
Objective: The dimensions of oral health-related quality of life (OHRQoL) Oral Function, Orofacial Pain, Orofacial Appearance, and Psychosocial Impact are the major areas where patients are impacted by oral diseases and dental interventions. The aim of this study was to evaluate whether dental patients' reasons to visit the dentist fit the 4 OHRQoL dimensions., Methods: Dentists (N = 1580) from 32 countries participated in a web-based survey. For their patients with current oral health problems, dentists were asked whether these problems were related to teeth, mouth, and jaws' function, pain, appearance, or psychosocial impact or whether they do not fit the aforementioned 4 categories. Dentists were also asked about their patients who intended to prevent future oral health problems. For both patient groups, the proportions of oral health problems falling into the 4 OHRQoL dimensions were calculated., Results: For every 100 dental patients with current oral health problems, 96 had problems related to teeth, mouth, and jaws' function, pain, appearance, or psychosocial impact. For every 100 dental patients who wanted to prevent future oral health problems, 92 wanted to prevent problems related to these 4 OHRQoL dimensions. Both numbers increased to at least 98 of 100 patients when experts analyzed dentists' explanations of why some oral health problems would not fit the four dimension. For the remaining 2 of 100 patients, none of the dentist-provided explanations suggested evidence against the OHRQoL dimensions as the concepts that capture dental patients' suffering., Conclusion: Oral Function, Orofacial Pain, Orofacial Appearance, and Psychosocial Impact capture dental patients' oral health problems worldwide. These 4 OHRQoL dimensions offer a psychometrically sound and practical framework for patient care and research, identifying what is important to dental patients., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2020
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6. Patient-Reported Outcome Measures for Adult Dental Patients: A Systematic Review.
- Author
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Mittal H, John MT, Sekulić S, Theis-Mahon N, and Rener-Sitar K
- Subjects
- Adult, Diagnosis, Oral, Humans, Quality of Life, Surveys and Questionnaires, Dental Care, Oral Health, Patient Reported Outcome Measures
- Abstract
Objectives: Patient-reported outcomes (PROs) are used beside disease-oriented outcomes (eg, number of teeth, clinical attachment level) to better capture the impact of diseases or interventions. To assess PROs for dental patients (dPROs), dental PRO measures (dPROMs) are applied. The aim of this systematic review was to identify generic dPROMs for adult patients and the dPROs., Methods: This systematic review searched the MEDLINE, Embase, and PsycINFO databases along with hand searching, through December 2017, to identify English-language, multi-item dPROMs that are oral health generic, that is, they are applicable to a broad range of adult patients., Results: We identified 20 questionnaires that contained 36 unique dPROs. They were measured by 53 dPROMs. dPRO names (N = 36) suggested they could be grouped into four dPRO categories: (1) Oral Function (N = 11), Orofacial Pain (N = 7), Orofacial Appearance (N = 3), and Psychosocial Impact (N = 14), as well as an additional dPRO that represented perceived oral health in general. Only eight questionnaires had a specific recall or reference period. dPROM's score dimensionality was only investigated in 13 of the 20 questionnaires., Conclusions: The identified 36 dPROs represent the major aspects of an adult dental patient's oral health experience; however, four major dPRO categories, that is, Oral Function, Orofacial Pain, Orofacial Appearance, and Psychosocial Impact, summarize how patients are impacted. If multi-item, oral health-generic dPROMs are to be used to measure patients' suffering, the 53 dPROMs represent current available tools. Limitations of the majority of these dPROMs include incomplete knowledge about their dimensionality, which affects their validity, and an unspecified recall period, which reduces their clinical applicability., (Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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