54 results on '"Heaton LJ"'
Search Results
2. Dentin hypersensitivity and oxalates: a systematic review.
- Author
-
Cunha-Cruz J, Stout JR, Heaton LJ, Wataha JC, for Northwest PRECEDENT, Cunha-Cruz, J, Stout, J R, Heaton, L J, Wataha, J C, and Northwest PRECEDENT
- Abstract
Treatment of dentin hypersensitivity with oxalates is common, but oxalate efficacy remains unclear. Our objective was to systematically review clinical trials reporting an oxalate treatment compared with no treatment or placebo with a dentin hypersensitivity outcome. Risk-of-bias assessment and data extraction were performed independently by two reviewers. Standardized mean differences (SMD) were estimated by random-effects meta-analysis. Of 677 unique citations, 12 studies with high risk-of-bias were included. The summary SMD for 3% monohydrogen-monopotassium oxalate (n = 8 studies) was -0.71 [95% Confidence Interval: -1.48, 0.06]. Other treatments, including 30% dipotassium oxalate (n = 1), 30% dipotassium oxalate plus 3% monohydrogen monopotassium oxalate (n = 3), 6% monohydrogen monopotassium oxalate (n = 1), 6.8% ferric oxalate (n = 1), and oxalate-containing resin (n = 1), also were not statistically significantly different from placebo treatments. With the possible exception of 3% monohydrogen monopotassium oxalate, available evidence currently does not support the recommendation of dentin hypersensitivity treatment with oxalates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Management of fear and anxiety in the dental clinic: A review
- Author
-
Jason M. Armfield, Lisa J. Heaton, Armfield, JM, and Heaton, LJ
- Subjects
Adult ,Hypnosis ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Population ,review ,Dental fear ,non-pharmacological ,Patient Education as Topic ,stomatognathic system ,dental anxiety ,Dental Anxiety ,medicine ,Humans ,Systematic desensitization ,Child ,Dental Care ,education ,Psychiatry ,General Dentistry ,Management practices ,Dentist-Patient Relations ,education.field_of_study ,treatment ,business.industry ,Dental Clinics ,Cognition ,Fear ,medicine.disease ,stomatognathic diseases ,Dental clinic ,Anxiety ,medicine.symptom ,business ,management ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
People who are highly anxious about undergoing dental treatment comprise approximately one in seven of the population and require careful and considerate management by dental practitioners. This paper presents a review of a number of non-pharmacological (behavioural and cognitive) techniques that can be used in the dental clinic or surgery in order to assist anxious individuals obtain needed dental care. Practical advice for managing anxious patients is provided and the evidence base for the various approaches is examined and summarized. The importance of firstly identifying dental fear and then understanding its aetiology, nature and associated components is stressed. Anxiety management techniques range from good communication and establishing rapport to the use of systematic desensitization and hypnosis. Some techniques require specialist training but many others could usefully be adopted for all dental patients, regardless of their known level of dental anxiety. It is concluded that successfully managing dentally fearful individuals is achievable for clinicians but requires a greater level of understanding, good communication and a phased treatment approach. There is an acceptable evidence base for several non-pharmacological anxiety management practices to help augment dental practitioners providing care to anxious or fearful children and adults. Refereed/Peer-reviewed
- Published
- 2013
4. Trauma-Informed Care in Oral Health Care: The role of dental hygienists.
- Author
-
Heaton LJ and Cheung HJ
- Subjects
- Humans, Dental Care psychology, Adult, Professional Role, Child, Dental Hygienists psychology, Oral Health, Dental Anxiety psychology, Dental Anxiety prevention & control
- Abstract
Traumatic experiences can impact individuals' oral health and how they experience dental treatment in ways patients and their dental providers may or may not initially anticipate. As approximately half of children and two-thirds of adults in the United States have experienced some type of traumatic event, it is critically important for providers to be aware of patients' trauma histories and to appropriately provide trauma-informed care to their patients when needed. Individuals with a trauma history may experience significant anxiety and distress in the dental setting, even for treatment many providers and patients consider to be "simple," such as a brief intraoral examination, radiographs, or prophylaxis. Such aspects of the dental setting may trigger memories and emotions related to the original trauma and may re-traumatize patients. This short report introduces links between traumatic history, poor oral health, and dental care-related fear and anxiety. Additionally, this paper briefly describes how dental hygienists can provide compassionate trauma-informed care to their patients with the goal of providing whole-person care that considers patients' comfort, health goals, and prior experiences. Specific recommendations for providing trauma-informed care to children and adults within the scope of dental hygiene practice are provided, as is suggested wording for acknowledging a patient's prior trauma and tailoring dental care to accommodate patient experiences and concerns. As dental hygienists are often the oral health providers spending the most time with patients, they are uniquely positioned to provide compassionate effective trauma-informed care to patients with past traumatic experiences., (Copyright © 2024 The American Dental Hygienists’ Association.)
- Published
- 2024
5. Dental anxiety and oral health in American Indian and Alaska natives.
- Author
-
Tiwari T, Wright CD, Heaton LJ, Santoro M, and Tranby EP
- Abstract
Objective: American Indian and Alaska native (AI/AN) individuals report distrust of the healthcare system. This study explored associations between having either high levels of dental distrust or high levels of dental care-related fear and anxiety ("dental anxiety") and oral health outcomes in AI/AN adults., Methods: The 2022 State of Oral Health Equity in America survey included the Modified Dental Anxiety Scale and asked to what extent respondents agreed with the statement, "At my last oral health visit, I trusted the oral health provider I saw", and asked about self-rated oral health and presence of a dental home., Results: AI/AN individuals (N = 564) who reported low dental trust (n = 110) or with high dental anxiety (MDAS≥19; n = 113) reported significantly worse overall and oral health and were significantly less likely to have a dental home (p < 0.05 used for each analysis)., Conclusion: Dental distrust and dental anxiety can significantly impact oral health and dental utilization in AI/AN communities and are important intervention targets to improve AI/AN oral health., (© 2024 American Association of Public Health Dentistry.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Changes in children's dental fear after restorative treatment under different sedation types: Associations with parents' experiences and dental health.
- Author
-
Heaton LJ, Wallace E, Randall CL, Christiansen M, Seminario AL, Kim A, and McKinney CM
- Subjects
- Child, Humans, Child, Preschool, Dental Anxiety, Prospective Studies, Parents, Conscious Sedation, Nitrous Oxide, Anesthesia, Dental
- Abstract
Background: Dentists often use sedative medications such as nitrous oxide inhaled sedation and general anesthesia (GA) to help decrease patient fear and manage paediatric patients' behavior during treatment., Aim: The goal of this study was to examine factors associated with dental fear changes after restorative dental treatment under nitrous oxide or GA in children 4-12 years old., Design: A prospective cohort study of 124 children examined changes in dental fear, number of treatment visits, and parental factors among children receiving restorative dental treatment under nitrous oxide (n = 68) or GA (n = 56) sedation. Data were collected at pretreatment (T1), 16 weeks post-treatment (T2), and at 29-month follow-up (T3)., Results: Dental fear increased slightly, but not significantly, under both forms of sedation between T1 and T3. Children's dental fear was associated with parents' poor dental experiences and oral health, but not with number of treatment visits., Conclusions: Progression of children's dental fear seems not dependent solely on the type of sedation used but is likely predicted by factors including pretreatment dental fear and dental needs. Dentists recommending sedation for children's dental care may consider pretreatment dental need, fear levels, and parental factors when determining which type of sedation to use., (© 2023 BSPD, IAPD and John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Discrimination and Dignity Experiences in Prior Oral Care Visits Predict Racialized Oral Health Inequities Among Nationally Representative US Adults.
- Author
-
Raskin SE, Thakkar-Samtani M, Santoro M, Fleming EB, Heaton LJ, and Tranby EP
- Abstract
Racism, an oppressive and fallacious sociopolitical hierarchy, is a fundamental cause of oral health inequities worldwide. Everyday discrimination is associated with worse self-rated oral health, toothache and adult tooth loss, and lower oral care utilization. Few studies examine discrimination or microaggressions within oral care settings or their effects on oral health outcomes. We adapted the seven-item Everyday Discrimination Scale to the oral care setting (EDSOC); developed a four-item Dignity in Oral Care Scale (DOCS); fielded them to a probability-based nationally representative sample of US households as part of the 2022 State of Oral Health Equity in America survey (SOHEA, n = 5682); and examined associations between EDSOC and DOCS scores and three outcomes: self-rated oral health, duration since last oral care visit, and planning for future preventive/routine oral care. Nearly, all EDSCOC and DOCS measures were significantly associated with oral health outcomes. Discrimination experience in dental settings had an additive effect on reporting fair/poor oral health and a suppressive effect on planning a future dental visit. Indignity experience doubled-to-quadrupled the likelihood of reporting fair/poor oral health, not having visited a dentist in 2 years, and not planning a future oral care visit. Racio-ethnically minoritized patients may experience the unjust double bind of resolving urgent dental or completing preventive services needs amidst being treated in a discriminatory manner or without dignity. Oral health stakeholders should invest more effort to understand relationships between racism and oral health outcomes and introduce evidence-based interventions to ultimately abolish this societal harm., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Framework for fiscal impact analysis of managing initial caries lesions with noninvasive therapies.
- Author
-
Shah SV, Kibbe LJ, Heaton LJ, Desrosiers C, Wittenborn J, Filipova M, Zaydenman K, and Keeper JH
- Subjects
- Humans, Cohort Studies, Fluorides, Topical therapeutic use, Dental Caries Susceptibility, Dental Caries drug therapy
- Abstract
Background: Evidence-based noninvasive caries therapies for initial caries lesions are available in the United States. Fundamental differences between noninvasive therapies and the traditional surgical dental approach warrant a study of the financial scalability., Methods: The financial costs and benefits of fee-for-service clinics and payors were compared across 11 scenarios simulating the treatment of 1,000 initial caries lesions during a 3-year period. The scenarios included varying combinations of noninvasive therapies (that is, silver diamine fluoride, self-assembling peptide P
11 -4, and glass ionomer therapeutic sealants), no treatment, and various rates of 1- through 3-surface restorations to an estimated 2022 practice model. We used a decision tree microsimulation model for deterministic and probabilistic sensitivity analyses. We derived assumptions from an initial lesion and noninvasive therapy-focused cohort study with operations data from 16 sites accepting Medicaid in Alabama as a case study and clinical data from all 92 sites., Results: In comparison with the 2022 practice model assumed for this study, scenarios that produce mutually beneficial results for payors' savings and clinics' net profits and profit margins include self-assembling peptide P11 -4, silver diamine fluoride on nonesthetic surfaces, and a mix of 3 noninvasive therapies. When considering the limited resources of chair and clinician time, the same scenarios, as well as silver diamine fluoride with restorations, emerged with substantially higher clinic net profit., Conclusions: Hypothetical scenarios that include noninvasive therapies and minimize restorations achieve improved outcomes for all parties., Practical Implications: Payors and clinicians should explore and implement noninvasive caries therapies to improve oral health for all. This study was registered at ClinicalTrials.gov. The registration number is NCT04933331., (Copyright © 2023 American Dental Association. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Systematic review and meta-analysis on the effect of self-assembling peptide P 11 -4 on arrest, cavitation, and progression of initial caries lesions.
- Author
-
Keeper JH, Kibbe LJ, Thakkar-Samtani M, Heaton LJ, Desrosiers C, Vela K, Amaechi BT, Jablonski-Momeni A, Young DA, MacLean J, Weyant RJ, Zandona AF, Sohn W, Pitts N, and Frantsve-Hawley J
- Subjects
- Humans, Dental Caries Susceptibility, Glycosyltransferases, Fluorides, Dental Caries therapy, Dental Caries pathology
- Abstract
Background: Simple noninvasive evidence-based interventions for caries are needed to overcome limitations in the restorative paradigm. The self-assembling peptide P
11 -4 is a noninvasive intervention that regenerates enamel in initial caries lesions., Studies Reviewed: The authors conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis on the effectiveness of the P11 -4 products Curodont Repair (Credentis; now manufactured by vVARDIS) (CR) and Curodont Repair Fluoride Plus (Credentis; now manufactured by vVARDIS) on initial caries lesions. Primary outcomes were lesion progression after 24 months, caries arrest, and cavitation. Secondary outcomes were changes in merged International Caries Detection and Assessment System score categories, quantitative light-induced fluorescence (QLF; Inspektor Research System), esthetic appearance, and lesion size., Results: Six clinical trials met the inclusion criteria. Results of this review represent 2 primary and 2 secondary outcomes. When compared with parallel groups, use of CR likely results in a large increase in caries arrest (relative risk [RR], 1.82 [95% CI, 1.32 to 2.50]; 45% attributable risk [95% CI, 24% to 60%]; number needed to treat [NNT], 2.8) and likely decreases lesion size by a mean (SD) of 32% (28%). The evidence also suggests that use of CR results in a large reduction in cavitation (RR, 0.32 [95% CI, 0.10 to 1.06]; NNT, 6.9) and is uncertain about lowering merged International Caries Detection and Assessment System score (RR, 3.68 [95% CI, 0.42 to 32.3]; NNT, 19). No studies used Curodont Repair Fluoride Plus. No studies reported adverse esthetic changes., Practical Implications: CR likely has clinically important effects on caries arrest and decreased lesion size. Two trials had nonmasked assessors, and all trials had elevated risks of bias. The authors recommend conducting longer trials. CR is a promising treatment for initial caries lesions. The protocol for this systematic review was registered a priori with PROSPERO (304794)., (Copyright © 2023 American Dental Association. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. The association between accessing dental services and nonventilator hospital-acquired pneumonia among 2019 Medicaid beneficiaries.
- Author
-
Baker D, Giuliano KK, Thakkar-Samtani M, Scannapieco FA, Glick M, Restrepo MI, Heaton LJ, and Frantsve-Hawley J
- Subjects
- United States epidemiology, Humans, Cross-Sectional Studies, Hospitals, Dental Care, Medicaid, Healthcare-Associated Pneumonia epidemiology, Healthcare-Associated Pneumonia prevention & control
- Abstract
In this 2019 cross-sectional study, we analyzed hospital records for Medicaid beneficiaries who acquired nonventilator hospital-acquired pneumonia. The results suggest that preventive dental treatment in the 12 months prior or periodontal therapy in the 6 months prior to a hospitalization is associated with a reduced risk of NVHAP.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Refining the process: Safety net dental professionals' experiences with teledentistry implementation during the first year of COVID-19.
- Author
-
McLeod CD, Heaton LJ, Chung-Bridges K, and Raskin SE
- Subjects
- Humans, Dentists, COVID-19, Telemedicine
- Abstract
Objectives: Teledentistry helped dentistry adapt to pandemic-era challenges; little is known about dental professionals' teledentistry experiences during this time. This analysis sought to understand professionals' pandemic teledentistry experiences and expectations for the modality's future., Methods: We conducted virtual individual interviews (n = 21) via Zoom to understand how federally qualified health centers (FQHCs) delivered oral care during the first year of the pandemic, including but not limited to the use of teledentistry. We independently coded each transcript, then identified themes and sub-themes., Results: We identified three major themes: (1) Logistical and equity considerations shaped teledentistry's adoption; (2) Team-based factors influenced implementation; and (3) Teledentistry's future is as-yet undetermined., Conclusions: Experiences with teledentistry during the first year of COVID-19 varied substantially. Future directions should be more deliberate to counter the urgency of pandemic-style implementation and must address appropriate use, reimbursement guidance, patient and provider challenges, and customizability to each clinic's context., (© 2022 American Association of Public Health Dentistry.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Periodontal treatment associated with decreased diabetes mellitus-related treatment costs: An analysis of dental and medical claims data.
- Author
-
Thakkar-Samtani M, Heaton LJ, Kelly AL, Taylor SD, Vidone L, and Tranby EP
- Subjects
- United States, Humans, Retrospective Studies, Health Care Costs, Medicaid, Diabetes Mellitus therapy, Periodontal Diseases complications, Periodontal Diseases therapy
- Abstract
Background: Diabetes mellitus (DM) and periodontal disease have a suggested bidirectional relationship. Researchers have reported decreases in DM-related health care costs after periodontal treatment. The authors examined the relationship between periodontal disease treatment and DM health care costs in commercial insurance and Medicaid claims data., Methods: This study of IBM MarketScan commercial insurance and Medicaid databases included overall outpatient, inpatient, and drug costs for patients with DM. The authors examined associations between overall health care costs per patient in 2019 according to use of periodontal services from 2017 through 2018 using generalized linear modeling. The average treatment effect on treated was calculated by means of propensity score matching using a logistic model for periodontal treatment on covariates., Results: For commercial insurance enrollees, periodontal treatment was associated with reduced overall health care costs of 12% compared with no treatment ($13,915 vs $15,739; average treatment effect on treated, -$2,498.20; 95% CI, -$3,057.21 to -$1,939.19; P < .001). In the Medicaid cohort, periodontal treatment was associated with a 14% decrease in costs compared with patients with DM without treatment ($14,796 vs $17,181; average treatment effect on treated, -$2,917.84; 95% CI, -$3,354.48 to -$2,480.76; P < .001). There were no significant differences in inpatient costs (commercial insurance) or drug costs (Medicaid)., Conclusions: Undergoing periodontal treatment is associated with reduced overall and outpatient health care costs for patients with DM in Medicaid and commercial insurance claims data. There were no significant differences in inpatient costs for commercial insurance enrollees or in drug costs for Medicaid beneficiaries., Practical Implications: A healthy mouth can play a key role in DM management. Expanding Medicaid benefits to include comprehensive periodontal treatment has the potential to reduce health care costs for patients with DM., (Copyright © 2023 American Dental Association. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Estimation of oral disease burden from claims and self-reported data.
- Author
-
Okunseri C, Frantsve-Hawley J, Thakkar-Samtani M, Okunev I, Heaton LJ, and Tranby EP
- Subjects
- Humans, Dental Care, Self Report, United States epidemiology, Oral Health, Cost of Illness, Dental Caries, Medicaid
- Abstract
Objective: To compare the use of Medicaid and commercial claims data with self-reported survey data in estimating the prevalence of oral disease burden., Methods: We analyzed 2018 Medicaid claims from the IBM Watson Medicaid Marketscan database, commercial claims from the IBM Dental Database, and Medical Expenditure Panel Survey (MEPS) data. The estimate of oral disease burden was based on standard metrics using periodontal and caries-related Current Dental Terminology (CDT) procedure codes. A direct comparison between the data sets was also done., Results: Unweighted Medicaid and commercial enrollees were 11.6 and 10.5 million, respectively. The weighted proportion from MEPS for Medicaid and commercial plans ranged from 80 to 208 million people. Estimates of caries-related treatments were calculated from IBM Watson and MEPS data for Medicaid enrollees (13% vs. 12%, respectively) and commercial claims (25% vs. 17%, respectively). Prevalence of periodontal related treatments for those with a dental visit was estimated for IBM Watson and MEPS enrollees for Medicaid (0.7% vs. 0.5%, respectively) and commercial claims (7% vs. 1.6%, respectively). Dental disease estimates were higher in individuals with at least one dental visit across cohorts. Prevalence of disease for those with a dental visit based on specific procedures were higher in commercial plans than in Medicaid., Conclusions: Claims data has the potential to serve as a proxy measure for the estimate of dental disease burden in a population., (© 2022 American Association of Public Health Dentistry.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Pre-doctoral dental faculty perceptions toward value-based care: An exploratory study.
- Author
-
McLeod CD, Kornegay EC, Tiwari T, Mason MR, Mathews RB, Apostolon DN, Heaton LJ, Wright JT, and Quinonez RB
- Subjects
- Humans, Students, Education, Dental, Schools, Teaching, Faculty, Dental, Curriculum
- Abstract
Objectives: To explore pre-doctoral faculty perceptions toward implementation of value-based care (VBC) in didactic and clinical teaching., Methods: This project was a collaborative effort between CareQuest and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Adams School of Dentistry introducing VBC to pre-doctoral dental faculty as part of a new curriculum. Following a faculty development session on VBC in June 2021, faculty and subject matter experts were invited to participate in qualitative interviews. Subject matter experts were interviewed to establish a baseline for VBC knowledge and understanding. Interviews were recorded and transcribed verbatim. Analysis was conducted by two analysts using ATLAS.ti and a thematic analysis approach., Results: Six faculty and two subject matter experts participated in interviews. Although dental faculty demonstrated some understanding of VBC, they recognized that more training is required to build in-depth knowledge and implementation strategies for teaching dental students. Faculty discussed value-based concepts such as prevention-focused teaching, person-centered care, and disease management over invasive restoration of teeth, and how VBC is bringing about a paradigm shift in dentistry that needs to be reflected in dental education. They acknowledged a disconnect between VBC in didactic teaching versus clinical instruction. Those interviewed believed it would take time to shift faculty mindset and readiness to teach VBC, and continued efforts are needed at the leadership and faculty level for acceptance and implementation., Conclusions: Although dental faculty recognize that VBC can bring a shift in dental practice, more training and guidance to implement it in didactic and clinical teaching is needed., (© 2022 American Dental Education Association.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Evolution and development of methodologies in social and behavioural science research in relation to oral health.
- Author
-
Baker SR, Heaton LJ, and McGrath C
- Subjects
- Humans, Behavioral Research, Motivation, Oral Health, Behavioral Sciences
- Abstract
The aim of this introductory paper is to provide an overview of key methodological developments in social and behavioural research in oral health. In the first section, we provide a brief historical perspective on research in the field. In the second section, we outline key methodological issues and introduce the seven papers in the theme. Conceptual models can contextualize research findings and address the 'why' and 'how' instead of 'what' and 'how many'. Many models exist, albeit they need to be evaluated (and adapted) for use in oral health research and in specific settings. The increasing availability of big data can facilitate this with data linkage. Through data linkage, it is possible to explore and understand in a broader capacity the array of factors that influence oral health outcomes and how oral health can influences other factors. With advances in statistical approaches, it is feasible to consider casual inferences and to quantify these effects. There is a need for not only individual efforts to embrace causal inference research but also systematic and structural changes in the field to yield substantial results. The value of qualitative research in co-producing knowledge with and from human participants in addressing 'the how' and 'the why' factors is also key. There have been calls to employ more sophisticated qualitative methods together with mixed methods approaches as ways of helping to address the complex or Wicked Problems in population oral health. In the final section, we outline possible future methodological directions in social and behavioural oral health research including participatory approaches and the development of core outcome sets. Our overriding goal in the paper is to facilitate a critical debate in relation to methodological issues which can be used to improve understanding and generate knowledge in population oral health and that this, in turn, will help inform oral health policy and practices., (© 2023 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Caries risk and social determinants of health: A big data report.
- Author
-
Rodriguez JL, Thakkar-Samtani M, Heaton LJ, Tranby EP, and Tiwari T
- Subjects
- Adult, Humans, Male, Big Data, Ethnicity, Surveys and Questionnaires, Dental Caries epidemiology, Dental Caries etiology, Dental Caries Susceptibility, Social Determinants of Health
- Abstract
Background: Oral health is influenced by social determinants of health (SDH), predisposing people and communities to greater risk of developing caries. This study evaluated the association between caries risk in adults and SDH such as ZIP Codes, systemic diseases, payment methods, and race or ethnicity., Methods: The BigMouth Dental Data Repository (n = 57,211) was used to extract clinical and SDH data from patients' dental electronic health records for 2019. Caries risk categories were used as ZIP Code data was merged with the Social Deprivation Index, a composite measure of area-level deprivation based on 7 demographic characteristics collected in the American Community Survey., Results: The results showed that the odds of being in the high caries risk group were higher for people in the 49- to 64-year age group (adjusted odds ratio [aOR], 2.24; 95% CI, 2.08 to 2.40; P ≤ .001), men (aOR, 1.19; 95% CI, 1.13 to 1.25; P ≤ .001), people who had comorbidities (diabetes: aOR, 1.16; 95% CI, 1.08 to 1.24; P ≤ .001; cardiovascular disease: aOR, 1.40; 95% CI, 1.32 to 1.50), and people with an Social Deprivation Index score above the 75th percentile (aOR, 2.39; 95% CI, 2.21 to 2.58; P ≤ .001). In addition, Hispanic and Black people had higher odds of being at high caries risk than other races or ethnicities (Hispanic: aOR, 3.05; 95% CI, 2.32 to 4.00; Black: aOR, 2.05; 95% CI, 1.02 to 4.01)., Conclusions: This study shows the association of caries risk with higher social deprivation, reinforcing the role of structural and upstream factors in oral health. This study is unique in using recorded ZIP Code information and assessing caries risk levels for those regions., Practical Implications: The physical and structural environment should be considered contributors to caries risk in people., (Copyright © 2023 American Dental Association. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Incidence, mortality, and cost trends in nonventilator hospital-acquired pneumonia in medicaid beneficiaries, 2015-2019.
- Author
-
Giuliano KK, Baker D, Thakkar-Samtani M, Glick M, Restrepo MI, Scannapieco FA, Heaton LJ, and Frantsve-Hawley J
- Subjects
- Humans, Medicaid, Incidence, Hospitals, Cross Infection epidemiology, Healthcare-Associated Pneumonia epidemiology, Pneumonia epidemiology, Pneumonia, Ventilator-Associated epidemiology
- Abstract
Nonventilator hospital-acquired pneumonia is associated with substantial morbidity, mortality, and costs during an episode of acute care. We examined NVHAP incidence, mortality, and costs of Medicaid beneficiaries over a 5-year period (2015-2019). Overall NVHAP incidence was 2.63 per 1,000 patient days, and mortality was 7.76%, with an excess cost per NVHAP case of $20,189., (Copyright © 2022 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Local Anesthetic Efficacy in Marijuana Users and Nonusers: A Pilot Study.
- Author
-
Moran MC, Heaton LJ, Leroux BG, and Flake NM
- Subjects
- Adult, Male, Female, Humans, Anesthetics, Local, Anesthesia, Local methods, Pilot Projects, Vasoconstrictor Agents, Lidocaine, Epinephrine, Dental Pulp Test, Dental Pulp, Cannabis, Anesthesia, Dental methods
- Abstract
Objective: Despite the common clinical impression that patients with a history of drug use are challenging to anesthetize with local anesthesia, literature on this clinical phenomenon is sparse. The objective of this pilot study was to assess if differences in local anesthetic efficacy for dental treatment exist between marijuana users and nonusers., Methods: Subjects were healthy adult males and females who qualified as either chronic marijuana users or nonusers. All subjects had an asymptomatic, vital maxillary lateral incisor that responded to an electric pulp test (EPT). A standard maxillary infiltration injection technique was employed using 1.7 mL 2% lidocaine with 1:100,000 epinephrine over the test tooth, and the tooth was tested with an EPT at 3-minute intervals., Results: A total of 88% of nonusers (15/17) and 61% of users (11/18) were successfully anesthetized, defined as anesthesia onset within 10 minutes and lasting at least 15 minutes. The difference in the proportion of anesthetized subjects was not statistically significant (P = .073). For subjects with successful anesthesia, there was no significant difference between nonusers and users in the onset or duration of anesthesia., Conclusion: No significant differences in local anesthetic efficacy with respect to local anesthetic success, onset, or duration of action were found between chronic marijuana users and nonusers. However, larger studies are likely needed to provide more definitive evidence., (© 2022 by the American Dental Society of Anesthesiology.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Oral Cancer Prevalence, Mortality, and Costs in Medicaid and Commercial Insurance Claims Data.
- Author
-
Tranby EP, Heaton LJ, Tomar SL, Kelly AL, Fager GL, Backley M, and Frantsve-Hawley J
- Subjects
- Adult, Health Care Costs, Humans, Insurance, Health, Male, Medicaid, Prevalence, Retrospective Studies, United States epidemiology, Mouth Neoplasms epidemiology, Mouth Neoplasms therapy, Oropharyngeal Neoplasms
- Abstract
Background: This study compared prevalence, incidence, mortality rates, treatment costs, and risk factors for oral and oropharyngeal cancer (OC/OPC) between two large United States adult cohorts in 2012-2019., Methods: Medicaid and commercial claims data came from the IBM Watson Health MarketScan Database. Logistic regression analyses estimated incidence and risk factors for OC/OPC. Mortality was calculated by merging deceased individuals' files with those of the existing cancer cohort. Summing costs of outpatient and inpatient services determined costs., Results: Prevalence of OC/OPC in Medicaid enrollees decreased each year (129.8 cases per 100,000 enrollees in 2012 to 88.5 in 2019); commercial enrollees showed a lower, more stable prevalence (64.7 per 100,000 in 2012 and 2019). Incidence trended downward in both cohorts, with higher incidence in the Medicaid (51.4-37.6 cases per 100,000) than the commercial cohort (31.9-31.0 per 100,000). Mortality rates decreased for Medicaid enrollees during 2012-2014 but increased in the commercial cohort. OC/OPC treatment costs were higher for commercial enrollees by $8.6 million during 2016-2019. OC/OPC incidence was higher among adults who were older, male, and white; used tobacco or alcohol; or had prior human immunodeficiency virus/acquired immune deficiency syndrome diagnosis and lower among those who had seen a dentist the prior year., Conclusions: Medicaid enrollees experienced higher OC/OPC incidence, prevalence, and mortality compared with commercially insured adults. Having seen a dentist within the prior year was associated with a lower risk of OC/OPC diagnosis., Impact: Expanding Medicaid dental benefits may allow OC/OPC to be diagnosed at earlier stages through regular dental visits., (©2022 The Authors; Published by the American Association for Cancer Research.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Consensus Statement on Future Directions for the Behavioral and Social Sciences in Oral Health.
- Author
-
McNeil DW, Randall CL, Baker S, Borrelli B, Burgette JM, Gibson B, Heaton LJ, Kitsaras G, McGrath C, and Newton JT
- Subjects
- Delivery of Health Care, Forecasting, Health Promotion, Humans, Oral Health, Social Sciences
- Abstract
The behavioral and social sciences are central to understanding and addressing oral and craniofacial health, diseases, and conditions. With both basic and applied approaches, behavioral and social sciences are relevant to every discipline in dentistry and all dental, oral, and craniofacial sciences, as well as oral health promotion programs and health care delivery. Key to understanding multilevel, interacting influences on oral health behavior and outcomes, the behavioral and social sciences focus on individuals, families, groups, cultures, systems, societies, regions, and nations. Uniquely positioned to highlight the importance of racial, cultural, and other equity in oral health, the behavioral and social sciences necessitate a focus on both individuals and groups, societal reactions to them related to power, and environmental and other contextual factors. Presented here is a consensus statement that was produced through an iterative feedback process. The statement reflects the current state of knowledge in the behavioral and social oral health sciences and identifies future directions for the field, focusing on 4 key areas: behavioral and social theories and mechanisms related to oral health, use of multiple and novel methodologies in social and behavioral research and practice related to oral health, development and testing of behavioral and social interventions to promote oral health, and dissemination and implementation research for oral health. This statement was endorsed by over 400 individuals and groups from around the world and representing numerous disciplines in oral health and the behavioral and social sciences. Having reached consensus, action is needed to advance and further integrate and translate behavioral and social sciences into oral health research, oral health promotion and health care, and the training of those working to ensure oral health for all.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Dental safety net providers' experiences with service delivery during the first year of COVID-19 should inform dental pandemic preparedness.
- Author
-
Raskin SE, Diep VK, Chung-Bridges K, Heaton LJ, and Frantsve-Hawley J
- Subjects
- Delivery of Health Care, Humans, Safety-net Providers, COVID-19 epidemiology, Pandemics
- Abstract
Background: COVID-19 disrupted oral health care delivery and revealed gaps in dental public health emergency preparedness and response (PHEPR). Emerging dental PHEPR frameworks can be strengthened by means of understanding the experiences of the discipline's frontline workers-dental safety net providers-during the initial phase of the COVID-19 pandemic., Methods: Experienced qualitative researchers interviewed dental safety net directors and clinicians (n = 21) in 6 states to understand their experiences delivering care from March 2020 through February 2021. Interview transcriptions were analyzed using iterative codes to identify major and minor themes. Conventional qualitative validity checks were used continuously to ensure impartiality and rigor., Results: Three major themes were identified: unpredictability caused concerns among staff members and patients, while also deepening fulfilling collaborations; care delivery was guided by means of various resources that balanced safety, flexibility, and respect for autonomy; and pandemic-driven changes to oral health care delivery are timely, long-lasting, and can be somewhat fraught., Conclusions: The human, material, and policy resources that providers used to control infections, serve vulnerable patients, maintain clinic solvency, and address provider burnout during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic can improve dental PHEPR., Practical Implications: Dental PHEPR should address concerns beyond infection control within and between practice models, governmental agencies, and professional organizations. Examples of such concerns include, but are not limited to, guideline synchronization, materials exigencies, task shifting, and provider resilience., (Copyright © 2022 American Dental Association. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. The impact of underutilization of preventive dental care by adult Medicaid participants.
- Author
-
Okunev I, Tranby EP, Jacob M, Diep VK, Kelly A, Heaton LJ, and Frantsve-Hawley J
- Subjects
- Adult, Dental Care, Emergency Service, Hospital, Humans, Income, United States, Analgesics, Opioid, Medicaid
- Abstract
Objective: To ascertain the financial impact associated with the underutilization of preventive dental care for adults enrolled in Medicaid., Methods: We used adult claims data for patients aged 21-64 in the IBM Watson Marketscan Medicaid database. Enrollees were included if they had at least one dental claim in 2019 and were continuously enrolled between 2014 and 2019. We then evaluated the costs of their dental care in 2019, based on the number of years of preventive dental care they received between 2014 and 2018. We also assessed Emergency Department (ED) utilization for dental conditions, oral surgeries, and dental-related opioid prescriptions., Results: The average Medicaid enrollee with five continuous years of preventive care prior to 2019 experienced 43% lower costs than an individual who received no preventive dental care at all. Most of the savings were a result of fewer oral surgeries. A Medicaid enrollee with no preventive dental visits was eight times more likely to have an ED visit for a nontraumatic dental condition (NTDC), seven times more likely to have oral surgery and six times more likely to receive a dental-related opioid prescription compared to those who had a dental prevention visit every year in the 5-year lookback period., Conclusions: Regular preventive dental care in the lookback period was associated with significant savings in overall dental care costs when compared to dental care costs for those individuals who received no or few preventive visits. Prior preventive dental care was also associated with lower rates of ED-NTDC utilization, oral surgery, and dental-related opioid prescriptions., (© 2022 The Authors. Journal of Public Health Dentistry published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Association of Public Health Dentistry.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Longitudinal Analysis of Children's Oral Health-Related Quality of Life After Restorative Dental Treatment.
- Author
-
Randall CL, Wallace E, Heaton LJ, Christiansen M, Kim A, Seminario AL, and McKinney CM
- Subjects
- Child, Child, Preschool, Dental Care, Female, Humans, Oral Health, Parents, Prospective Studies, Quality of Life, Anesthesia, Dental, Dental Caries
- Abstract
Purpose: To document mid- and long-term changes in oral health-related quality of life (OHRQoL) following dental intervention in a sample of restorative treatment-naïve children receiving different levels of care, with and without general anesthesia (GA). Methods: This prospective cohort study followed 132 children. Parents completed the pediatric OHRQoL instrument (POQL) before, 16 weeks after (i.e., posttreatment), and 18 to 45 (mean equals 29.5) months after (i.e., follow-up) child receipt of treatment. Parents provided child demographic and oral health information. The number of restored surfaces and anesthesia type were abstracted from dental records. The mean differences in POQL scores were compared across groups. Results: The sample was 49 percent female (age range equals four to 12 years; mean±standard deviation equals 5.8±1.8). Overall, from pretreatment to posttreatment, mean POQL scores decreased by 4.5 points (P<0.001), representing improved OHRQoL. Only among children with 10 or more surfaces restored or who received GA did follow-up POQL scores remain significantly lower than pretreatment scores (mean difference equals -7.4 and -8.0, respectively, P<0.01). Overall, follow-up scores were significantly higher than posttreatment scores, representing a decline from the initial improvement. Conclusions: Regardless of disease severity, children experience an immediate improvement in OHRQoL following restorative treatment. Improvements in OHRQoL are sustained over the long-term only among children with more extensive pretreatment needs.
- Published
- 2021
24. Mouthguards during orthodontic treatment: Perspectives of orthodontists and a survey of orthodontic patients playing school-sponsored basketball and football.
- Author
-
Bastian NE, Heaton LJ, Capote RT, Wan Q, Riedy CA, and Ramsay DS
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Humans, Orthodontists, Surveys and Questionnaires, Basketball, Football, Mouth Protectors
- Abstract
Introduction: The objectives of this research were to identify the beliefs and practices of orthodontists about mouthguard use in orthodontic patients and to survey orthodontic patients currently playing school-sponsored basketball and/or football about mouthguards., Methods: Fifteen orthodontists were interviewed about mouthguard use in their patients. Patients (aged 11-18 years) playing organized school basketball (n = 53) or football (n = 22) from 13 of those 15 orthodontic practices participated in an online survey about mouthguards., Results: Approximately half of the orthodontists interviewed had initiated discussions about mouthguards with their patients. Although boil-and-bite mouthguards were recommended most often by orthodontists with only a single orthodontist recommending a stock type, stock was the most commonly used type (football [59%], basketball [50%]) followed by boil-and-bite (football [27%], basketball [35%]). Only 2 of the 75 patients surveyed (<3%) reported using a custom mouthguard. All football players reported using a mouthguard, as mandated by this sport. Basketball does not mandate mouthguard use, and only 38% of basketball players reported wearing one. Players who used mouthguards cited forgetting as the most frequent reason for not always using one. A greater percentage of football (91%) than basketball (32%) players reported that their coach recommended a mouthguard (P <0.001)., Conclusions: Orthodontists differ in how they approach mouthguard use by their patients, which likely reflects a lack of evidence-based guidelines. The beliefs, recommendations, and practices of orthodontists concerning mouthguard use and the use of mouthguards by orthodontic patients are discussed. Research directions to improve mouthguard use are suggested., (Copyright © 2019 American Association of Orthodontists. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Nonpharmacologic Interventions may Reduce Mental Distress in Adults Undergoing Dental Treatment.
- Author
-
Heaton LJ
- Subjects
- Adult, Humans, Dental Care
- Abstract
Article Title and Bibliographic Information: Non-pharmacological interventions for reducing mental distress in patients undergoing dental procedures: Systematic review and meta-analysis. Burghardt S, Koranyi S, Magnucki G, Strauss B, Rosendahl J. J Dent. 2018;69:22-31., Source of Funding: None reported TYPE OF STUDY DESIGN: Meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials., (Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Influence of clinicians' experience and gender on extraction decision in orthodontics.
- Author
-
Saghafi N, Heaton LJ, Bayirli B, Turpin DL, Khosravi R, and Bollen AM
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Child, Preschool, Esthetics, Dental, Female, Humans, Incisor, Male, Mandible, Observer Variation, Online Systems, Orthodontics, Corrective statistics & numerical data, Orthodontists education, Orthodontists psychology, Pilot Projects, Practice Patterns, Physicians', Sex Factors, Surveys and Questionnaires, Washington, Decision Making, Malocclusion, Angle Class I therapy, Orthodontics statistics & numerical data, Orthodontics, Corrective methods, Tooth Extraction statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Objective: To determine whether, in Class I borderline cases, experienced orthodontists choose nonextraction treatment more frequently than do orthodontists with less experience. A secondary aim was to evaluate whether clinicians' gender and place of education play a role in extraction decision making., Materials and Methods: An online survey was developed using three Class I borderline patient cases. The survey included questions about clinicians' demographics as well as questions about the selected cases. The survey was distributed to approximately 2000 clinicians through the American Association of Orthodontics., Results: Of the 253 responses collected, a trend was observed wherein clinicians with more than 15 years of experience preferred an extraction treatment option more frequently than did clinicians with less than 5 years of experience. There was no association between gender and place of education and the decision to extract in the selected borderline cases. Crowding, patient's profile, and mandibular incisor inclination were among the top three reasons chosen by clinicians for both the extraction and nonextraction treatment decisions., Conclusions: A trend was observed in which clinicians with more experience chose an extraction treatment option more frequently in borderline cases than did those with less experience. Clinicians' gender did not play a role in extraction decision making.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Dental fear among transgender individuals - a cross-sectional survey.
- Author
-
Heima M, Heaton LJ, Ng HH, and Roccoforte EC
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Risk Factors, Surveys and Questionnaires, United States, Dental Anxiety psychology, Transgender Persons psychology
- Abstract
Aims: The aims of this study were to: (1) evaluate the level of dental fear among transgender individuals and (2) investigate specific predictors of dental fear in individuals who identify as transgender., Method and Results: An anonymous survey among transgender adults was conducted using both a web-based and paper survey. The survey included the Dental Fear Survey (DFS), history of hormonal interventions, perceived gender roles, and demographic information. The bivariate analyses did not show a significant difference in DFS between sex assigned at birth (p = 0.628) or among gender identities (p = 0.109). A regression model analysis for the level of DFS by using participants' demographic information as independent variables indicated the fear and experience of discrimination/maltreatment were significant predictors of dental fear; standardized beta coefficients (p-value) were 0.35 (p = 0.017) and 0.28 (p = 0.041), respectively., Conclusion: The fear and experiences of discrimination/maltreatment were significantly positively associated with their level of dental fear., (© 2017 Special Care Dentistry Association and Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Self-reported Dental Anxiety is Associated With Both State Anxiety and Dental Procedure-Related Pain.
- Author
-
Heaton LJ
- Subjects
- Humans, Pain, Self Report, Dental Anxiety, Tooth
- Abstract
Article Title and Bibliographic Information: Association between anxiety and pain in dental treatment: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Lin CS, Wu SY, Yi CA. J Dent Res 2016;November 14:0022034516678168., Source of Funding: Ministry of Science and Technology of Taiwan (103-2314-B-010-025-MY3)., Type of Study/design: Systematic review with meta-analysis of data., (Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Oral health in patients taking psychotropic medications: Results from a pharmacy-based pilot study.
- Author
-
Heaton LJ, Swigart K, McNelis G, Milgrom P, and Downing DF
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Antipsychotic Agents administration & dosage, Antipsychotic Agents adverse effects, Female, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Humans, Male, Mental Disorders epidemiology, Middle Aged, Mouth Diseases epidemiology, Pilot Projects, Professional Role, Socioeconomic Factors, Tooth Diseases epidemiology, Young Adult, Antipsychotic Agents therapeutic use, Community Pharmacy Services organization & administration, Dental Care statistics & numerical data, Mental Disorders drug therapy, Oral Health
- Abstract
Objectives: Individuals with mental illness face an increased risk of oral disease compared with those without mental illness. The goals of this study were to examine the self-reported oral health and dental access of individuals filling psychotropic medication prescriptions and to determine whether pharmacy patients would choose to speak with a pharmacist about their oral health if given the option to do so., Design: Pharmacists across 6 community pharmacies within a local chain identified and surveyed adult patients filling prescriptions for psychotropic medications. Surveys included questions about oral health, dry mouth, and dental care utilization., Setting: Six community pharmacy locations., Participants: Adults (≥18 years of age) filling prescriptions for psychotropic medications., Intervention: Not applicable., Main Outcome Measures: Self-reported oral health, dental utilization, desire to discuss oral health with a pharmacist., Results: Participants (N = 178) filling prescriptions were mostly (65.9%) female with a mean age of 48.2 years (SD 14.3, range 19-82 years). One in 4 (24.9%) said their mouths "always" or "frequently" felt dry; these individuals were significantly more likely to have last seen a dentist for emergency (rather than routine) treatment (P <0.01) and rated their oral health as significantly worse (P <0.001) than participants whose mouths "never" or "occasionally" feel dry. A small percentage (5.7%) requested to speak with pharmacists about oral health; they reported poorer oral health than those who opted not to speak with a pharmacist (P <0.05)., Conclusion: One in 4 patients reported having dry mouth, and those with dry mouth reported significantly worse oral health than patients without dry mouth. Although dry mouth and poor oral health were common in this sample of individuals taking psychotropic medications, this did not consistently translate into seeking information regarding oral health. Future research will focus on pharmacist-initiated oral health interventions with high-risk patients., (Copyright © 2016 American Pharmacists Association®. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Communicating with Patients with Special Health Care Needs.
- Author
-
Espinoza KM and Heaton LJ
- Subjects
- Communication, Dental Anxiety, Dentist-Patient Relations, Humans, Intellectual Disability, Mental Disorders, Communication Barriers, Dental Care for Disabled
- Abstract
People with special health care needs (PSHCN) often have difficulty communicating with providers in health care settings, including dental practices. This difficulty can affect access to care as well as the quality of care received. This article provides practical tips and tools dental professionals can use to facilitate communication for a diverse population of PSHCNs. The article discusses communication needs of patients with communication disorders; augmentative and alternative communication; and communication for patients with intellectual disability, psychiatric conditions; and dental fears. Examples are given of communication breakdowns, and descriptions of how communication challenges can be resolved., (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Predictors of unmet dental need in children with autism spectrum disorder: results from a national sample.
- Author
-
McKinney CM, Nelson T, Scott JM, Heaton LJ, Vaughn MG, and Lewis CW
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Male, Surveys and Questionnaires, United States, Autism Spectrum Disorder, Dental Care for Children, Dental Care for Disabled, Health Services Needs and Demand
- Abstract
Objective: Unmet dental need in children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is common. We tested hypotheses that lacking a medical home or having characteristics of more severe ASD is positively associated with having unmet dental need among children with ASD., Methods: Using data from the 2009 to 2010 National Survey of Children with Special Health Care Needs, we analyzed 2772 children 5 to 17 years old with ASD. We theorized that unmet dental need would be positively associated with not having a medical home and having characteristics of more severe ASD (eg, parent reported severe ASD, an intellectual disability, communication, or behavior difficulties). Prevalence of unmet dental need was estimated, and unadjusted and adjusted odds ratios, 95% confidence intervals, and P values were computed using survey methods for logistic regression., Results: Nationally, 15.1% of children with ASD had unmet dental need. Among children with ASD, those without a medical home were more apt to have unmet dental need than those with a medical home (adjusted odds ratio, 4.46; 95% confidence interval, 2.59-7.69). Children with ASD with intellectual disability or greater communication or behavioral difficulties had greater odds of unmet dental need than those with ASD without these characteristics. Parent-reported ASD severity was not associated with unmet dental need., Conclusions: Children with ASD without a medical home and with characteristics suggestive of increased ASD-related difficulties were more apt to have unmet dental need. Pediatricians might use these findings to aid in identifying children with ASD who might not receive all needed dental care., (Copyright © 2014 Academic Pediatric Association. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Behavioral interventions may reduce dental anxiety and increase acceptance of dental treatment in dentally fearful adults.
- Author
-
Heaton LJ
- Subjects
- Humans, Dental Anxiety therapy, Psychotherapy
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Development of labeled magnitude scales for the assessment of pain of dentin hypersensitivity.
- Author
-
Heaton LJ, Barlow AP, and Coldwell SE
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Air, Cold Temperature, Focus Groups, Hot Temperature, Humans, Middle Aged, Patient Acuity, Sensitivity and Specificity, Terminology as Topic, Water, Young Adult, Dentin Sensitivity classification, Pain Measurement methods
- Abstract
Aims: To develop and test labeled magnitude (LM) scales that are sensitive to variations in pain associated with dentin hypersensitivity (DH)., Methods: Qualitative methods were used first to obtain words that describe the pain of DH. Magnitude estimation was then used to determine the position of these descriptive terms by relative magnitude along four vertical LM scales. To assess their DH, patients used the four LM scales following dentin stimulation with 4°C and 25°C water. The LM scales were then compared to visual analog scale (VAS) ratings by using eight pain scenarios of varying severity. Finally, participants with DH completed the four horizontal LM scales and VAS after dentin stimulation with 4°C and 25°C water. Within-subject t tests were used for comparisons between scales and water temperatures, and between-subject t tests were used for comparisons between participants with and without DH., Results: Participants showed comparable differentiation between 4°C and 25°C water on VAS and three of the LM scale measures. Responses on the fourth LM scale showed better differentiation than VAS between the two water temperatures. Participants used a greater portion of the LM scales than VAS when rating low-level pain scenarios., Conclusion: LM scales were shown to provide some advantages compared to standard VAS when used to evaluate DH-associated pain. These advantages may be generalized to other low-level pain conditions.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Computerized dental injection fear treatment: a randomized clinical trial.
- Author
-
Heaton LJ, Leroux BG, Ruff PA, and Coldwell SE
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Dental Care psychology, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Needles adverse effects, Pamphlets, Relaxation Therapy, Single-Blind Method, Young Adult, Computer-Assisted Instruction methods, Dental Anxiety prevention & control, Desensitization, Psychologic methods, Injections psychology, Patient Education as Topic
- Abstract
One in four adults reports a clinically significant fear of dental injections, leading many to avoid dental care. While systematic desensitization is the most common therapeutic method for treating specific phobias such as fear of dental injections, lack of access to trained therapists, as well as dentists' lack of training and time in providing such a therapy, means that most fearful individuals are not able to receive the therapy needed to be able to receive necessary dental treatment. Computer Assisted Relaxation Learning (CARL) is a self-paced computerized treatment based on systematic desensitization for dental injection fear. This multicenter, block-randomized, dentist-blind, parallel-group study conducted in 8 sites in the United States compared CARL with an informational pamphlet in reducing fear of dental injections. Participants completing CARL reported significantly greater reduction in self-reported general and injection-specific dental anxiety measures compared with control individuals (p < .001). Twice as many CARL participants (35.3%) as controls (17.6%) opted to receive a dental injection after the intervention, although this was not statistically significant. CARL, therefore, led to significant changes in self-reported fear in study participants, but no significant differences in the proportion of participants having a dental injection.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Unmet dental need in community-dwelling adults with mental illness: results from the 2007 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey.
- Author
-
Heaton LJ, Mancl LA, Grembowski D, Armfield JM, and Milgrom P
- Subjects
- Abscess epidemiology, Adult, Anxiety Disorders epidemiology, Crowns statistics & numerical data, Dental Restoration, Permanent statistics & numerical data, Educational Status, Employment statistics & numerical data, Female, Health Services Accessibility statistics & numerical data, Health Surveys statistics & numerical data, Humans, Income statistics & numerical data, Insurance, Dental statistics & numerical data, Insurance, Health statistics & numerical data, Male, Middle Aged, Mood Disorders epidemiology, Tooth Diseases epidemiology, Tooth Extraction statistics & numerical data, United States epidemiology, Vulnerable Populations statistics & numerical data, Young Adult, Dental Care statistics & numerical data, Health Services Needs and Demand statistics & numerical data, Independent Living statistics & numerical data, Mentally Ill Persons statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Background: Mental illness (MI) affects approximately one in five U.S. adults, and it is associated with oral disease and poor dental treatment outcomes. Little is known about dental care utilization or unmet dental need in this population., Methods: The authors examined data regarding presence or absence of dental visits and unmet dental need in community-dwelling adults with MI from the 2007 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey. They tested differences between adults with and without MI by using multivariate logistic regression., Results: Eighteen percent of adults (N = 19,368) had MI, and of these, 6.8 percent had unmet dental need. Although people with MI were not significantly more likely to have had a dental visit (46.3 percent) than were those without MI (42.2 percent; odds ratio [OR], 1.09; 95 percent confidence interval [CI], 0.97-1.23), they were significantly more likely to report unmet need (11.0 versus 5.3 percent; OR, 2.00; 95 percent CI, 1.67-2.41). Those with mood or anxiety disorders were most likely to report having an unmet dental need (P < .001 for all values)., Conclusions: Although people with MI did not visit the dentist significantly more often than did adults without MI, their higher level of unmet need suggests that current use of dental services is not addressing their needs adequately., Practical Implications: Dentists should be familiar with MI conditions as patients with MI may have greater unmet dental need.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. The prevalence of dentin hypersensitivity in general dental practices in the northwest United States.
- Author
-
Cunha-Cruz J, Wataha JC, Heaton LJ, Rothen M, Sobieraj M, Scott J, and Berg J
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Age Factors, Aged, Community-Based Participatory Research statistics & numerical data, Cross-Sectional Studies, Dental Occlusion, Traumatic epidemiology, Female, General Practice, Dental statistics & numerical data, Gingival Recession epidemiology, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Northwestern United States epidemiology, Pain Measurement, Prevalence, Risk Factors, Self Report, Sex Factors, Tooth Bleaching statistics & numerical data, Tooth Wear epidemiology, Young Adult, Dentin Sensitivity epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: The prevalence of dentin hypersensitivity is uncertain, yet appropriate diagnosis and treatment of dentin hypersensitivity require accurate knowledge regarding its prevalence. The authors conducted a study to estimate the prevalence of dentin hypersensitivity in general dental practices and to investigate associated risk factors., Methods: The authors conducted a cross-sectional survey of 787 adult patients from 37 general dental practices within Northwest Practice-based Research Collaborative in Evidence-based DENTistry (PRECEDENT). Dentin hypersensitivity was diagnosed by means of participants' responses to a question regarding pain in their teeth and gingivae, and practitioner-investigators conducted a clinical examination to rule out alternative causes of pain. Participants recorded their pain level on a visual analog scale and the Seattle Scales in response to a one-second air blast. The authors used generalized estimating equation log-linear models to estimate the prevalence and the prevalence ratios., Results: The prevalence of dentin hypersensitivity was 12.3 percent; patients with hypersensitivity had, on average, 3.5 hypersensitive teeth. The prevalence of dentin hypersensitivity was higher among 18- to 44-year olds than among participants 65 years or older; it also was higher in women than in men, in participants with gingival recession than in those without gingival recession and in participants who underwent at-home tooth whitening than in those who did not. Hypersensitivity was not associated with obvious occlusal trauma, noncarious cervical lesions or aggressive toothbrushing habits., Conclusions: One in eight participants from general practices had dentin hypersensitivity, which was a chronic condition causing intermittent, low-level pain. Patients with hypersensitivity were more likely to be younger, to be female and to have a high prevalence of gingival recession and at-home tooth whitening., Practical Implications: Given dentin hypersensitivity's prevalence, clinicians should diagnose it only after investigating all other possible sources of pain.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. UNITED STATES DENTAL PROFESSIONALS' PERCEPTIONS OF DENTAL ANXIETY AND NEED FOR SEDATION IN PATIENTS WITH MENTAL ILLNESS.
- Author
-
Heaton LJ, Hyatt HA, Huggins KH, and Milgrom P
- Abstract
Dental fear is a barrier to receiving dental care, particularly for those patients who also suffer from mental illnesses. The current study examined United States dental professionals' perceptions of dental fear experienced by patients with mental illness, and frequency of sedation of patients with and without mental illness. Dentists and dental staff members (n = 187) completed a survey about their experiences in treating patients with mental illness. More participants agreed (79.8%) than disagreed (20.2%) that patients with mental illness have more anxiety regarding dental treatment ( p < .001) than dental patients without mental illness. Further, significantly more participants reported mentally ill patients' anxiety is "possibly" or "definitely" a barrier to both receiving (96.8%; p < .001) and providing (76.9%; p < .01) dental treatment. Despite reporting more fear in these patients, there were no significant differences in frequency of sedation procedures between those with and without mental illness, regardless of type of sedation (p's > .05). This lack of difference in sedation for mentally ill patients suggests hesitancy on the part of dental providers to sedate patients with mental illness and highlights a lack of clinical guidelines for this population in the US. Suggestions are given for the assessment and clinical management of patients with mental illness.
- Published
- 2012
38. The effects of dental anxiety and irregular attendance on referral for dental treatment under sedation within the National Health Service in London.
- Author
-
Milgrom P, Newton JT, Boyle C, Heaton LJ, and Donaldson N
- Subjects
- Adult, Age Factors, Chi-Square Distribution, Conscious Sedation, Dental Care psychology, Educational Status, Female, Health Care Surveys, Humans, London epidemiology, Male, Oral Health, Referral and Consultation, Sex Factors, State Medicine statistics & numerical data, Anesthesia, Dental psychology, Dental Anxiety psychology, Patient Compliance psychology
- Abstract
Objective: To investigate whether the relationship between dental anxiety and referral for treatment under sedation is explained by attendance patterns and oral health., Methods: Structural Equation Modeling was used on the covariance matrix of the covariates to test hypothesized inter-relationships. Subsequently, we modeled the probability of referral for treatment under sedation with a multiple logistic regression taking into account inter-relationships between the independent variables., Results: A direct significant association of referral with dental anxiety and attendance patterns was detected, but not with oral health status. However, oral health and anxiety were highly correlated. Also signaled were correlations between age and education and between gender and bad past experience., Conclusion: Referral for treatment under sedation appears to be motivated by both fear and irregular patterns of attendance. Coupled with behavioral treatments to address dental fear and attendance, sedation can be an important part of comprehensive care where curative treatments are long or unpleasant for patients., (© 2010 John Wiley & Sons A/S.)
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Treating dentin hypersensitivity: therapeutic choices made by dentists of the northwest PRECEDENT network.
- Author
-
Cunha-Cruz J, Wataha JC, Zhou L, Manning W, Trantow M, Bettendorf MM, Heaton LJ, and Berg J
- Subjects
- Adult, Calcium Phosphates therapeutic use, Data Collection, Dental Cements therapeutic use, Dental Restoration, Permanent, Dentin Sensitivity therapy, Female, Fluorides, Topical therapeutic use, Glutaral therapeutic use, Humans, Information Systems, Male, Middle Aged, Northwestern United States, Surveys and Questionnaires, Young Adult, Dental Research organization & administration, Dentin Desensitizing Agents therapeutic use, Dentin Sensitivity diagnosis
- Abstract
Background: Methods used by dental practitioners to diagnose and treat dentin hypersensitivity are not well documented. The authors conducted a survey of dentists in the Northwest Practice-based REsearch Collaborative in Evidence-based DENTistry (PRECEDENT) to ascertain the treatment methods they used. Methods. Via an Internet survey, the authors collected data regarding methods used for diagnosis and treatment of dentin hypersensitivity from 209 Northwest PRECEDENT dentists., Results: The PRECEDENT dentists indicated that they most often used fluoride varnishes and gels, advice regarding toothbrushing and diet, bonding agents, restorative materials and glutaraldehyde/2-hydroxyethyl methacrylate (HEMA) to treat dentin hypersensitivity. They reported that the most successful treatments were fluorides, glutaraldehyde/HEMA, bonding agents, potassium nitrates and restorative treatments; they considered observation, advice regarding toothbrushing and diet and laser therapy to be the least successful. Dentists listed fluorides, calcium phosphates, glutaraldehyde/HEMA and bonding agents as the treatments most desirable for inclusion in a future randomized clinical trial of dental hypersensitivity treatments., Conclusions: Dentists rely on patients to assess the severity of dentin hypersensitivity. Modalities for the diagnosis and treatment of hypersensitivity are diverse. Methods used to diagnose and treat dentin hypersensitivity in practice are challenging to justify., Clinical Implications: Practitioners should be aware of the diversity of methods available for diagnosing and treating dentin hypersensitivity as they manage the care of their patients with this condition.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. What happens after referral for sedation?
- Author
-
Boyle CA, Newton T, Heaton LJ, Afzali S, and Milgrom P
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Anesthesia, Dental methods, Behavior Therapy statistics & numerical data, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, London, Male, Middle Aged, Referral and Consultation statistics & numerical data, Surveys and Questionnaires, Young Adult, Anesthesia, Dental statistics & numerical data, Conscious Sedation statistics & numerical data, Dental Anxiety psychology, Dental Anxiety therapy, Patient Dropouts statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Objective: To follow up 100 referrals to the sedation clinic, examining dental anxiety and background of patients, and to assess how many patients attended for treatment planning, initial treatment and how many completed treatment, and describe the characteristics of each. For those who attended for initial treatment, to investigate which type of sedation they received and the level of clinician they saw., Design: Descriptive, cross-sectional survey and review of case notes., Subjects and Methods: Subjects were 100 consecutive new patients to the Department of Sedation and Special Care Dentistry at Guy's and St Thomas NHS Foundation Trust. The notes were analysed by an experienced member of staff (CAB) and data entered into an Excel spreadsheet and an SPSS data file created. These data were merged with a dataset containing their responses to the initial questionnaire and medical history for analysis., Results: Of the 100 patients initially referred, 72 attended the treatment planning session, 66 of the 72 (92%) attended for initial dental treatment, and 33 of 66 (50%) completed treatment. Dental Fear Survey (DFS) scores were related to attendance at the initial treatment visit but not to completion of treatment. Only 33 of 100 referred patients completed treatment., Conclusions: Attendance for treatment planning and initial treatment was high. Attendance is related to fear and mental health. Overall completion of treatment from referral was 33%.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Propranolol and D-cycloserine as adjunctive medications in reducing dental fear in sedation practice.
- Author
-
Heaton LJ, McNeil DW, and Milgrom P
- Subjects
- Adaptation, Psychological, Behavior Therapy, Humans, Adjuvants, Anesthesia therapeutic use, Anesthesia, Dental, Anti-Anxiety Agents therapeutic use, Conscious Sedation, Cycloserine therapeutic use, Dental Anxiety prevention & control, Propranolol therapeutic use
- Abstract
Extensive research and clinical experience have demonstrated the usefulness of sedation in helping fearful patients receive dental treatment, particularly when they have urgent treatment needs. In addition, the efficacy of behavioural programmes for managing dental fears is well established. While often these two approaches are seen as oppositional, our work in Seattle, Morgantown and at King's College London Dental Institute demonstrates the complementarity of the two approaches. Using the example of two compounds, one very familiar, propranolol, and one that has recently become of interest, D-cycloserine, we wish to illustrate the manner in which these medications can be used to enhance behavioural approaches to managing dental anxiety.
- Published
- 2010
42. The challenge of sedation with adolescents: case studies and clinical recommendations.
- Author
-
Coolidge T, Heaton LJ, and Milgrom P
- Subjects
- Adaptation, Psychological, Administration, Oral, Adolescent, Anesthetics, Combined administration & dosage, Humans, Hypnotics and Sedatives administration & dosage, Injections, Lidocaine administration & dosage, Lidocaine, Prilocaine Drug Combination, Midazolam administration & dosage, Prilocaine administration & dosage, Adolescent Behavior, Anesthesia, Dental methods, Conscious Sedation methods, Dental Anxiety prevention & control
- Abstract
Adolescent dental patients pose a unique challenge to providers, particularly when intravenous sedation is introduced to the treatment plan. Surveys show many adolescents are afraid of the dentist. Five to six per cent overall are fearful of dental injections and may avoid care or have irregular attendance. At the same time, adolescents may assert their independence by refusing to cooperate with providers' and parents' requests even while accepting that the goal of better health is reasonable. Successful treatment of--and rapport with--the adolescent dental patient, however, can ensure that adolescents' oral needs are met. Successful providers recognise that adolescents alternate between childlike and mature coping strategies during the course of dental treatment. Identifying an adolescent's current coping style can help the dental team select appropriate strategies to help treatment proceed more smoothly for the adolescent and clinical team. Working with adolescents' individual coping styles, rather than expecting consistently adult behaviour, will ideally help decrease frustration and improve treatment outcome.
- Published
- 2009
43. Psychometric properties of Spanish-language adult dental fear measures.
- Author
-
Coolidge T, Chambers MA, Garcia LJ, Heaton LJ, and Coldwell SE
- Abstract
Background: It would be useful to have psychometrically-sound measures of dental fear for Hispanics, who comprise the largest ethnic minority in the United States. We report on the psychometric properties of Spanish-language versions of two common adult measures of dental fear (Modified Dental Anxiety Scale, MDAS; Dental Fear Survey, DFS), as well as a measure of fear of dental injections (Needle Survey, NS)., Methods: Spanish versions of the measures were administered to 213 adults attending Hispanic cultural festivals, 31 students (who took the questionnaire twice, for test-retest reliability), and 100 patients at a dental clinic. We also administered the questionnaire to 136 English-speaking adults at the Hispanic festivals and 58 English-speaking students at the same college where we recruited the Spanish-speaking students, to compare the performance of the English and Spanish measures in the same populations., Results: The internal reliabilities of the Spanish MDAS ranged from 0.80 to 0.85. Values for the DFS ranged from 0.92 to 0.96, and values for the NS ranged from 0.92 to 0.94. The test-retest reliabilities (intra-class correlations) for the three measures were 0.69, 0.86, and 0.94 for the MDAS, DFS, and NS, respectively. The three measures showed moderate correlations with one another in all three samples, providing evidence for construct validity. Patients with higher scores on the measures were rated as being more anxious during dental procedures. Similar internal reliabilities and correlations were found in the English-version analyses. The test-retest values were also similar in the English students for the DFS and NS; however, the English test-retest value for the MDAS was better than that found in the Spanish students., Conclusion: We found evidence for the internal reliability, construct validity, and criterion validity for the Spanish versions of the three measures, and evidence for the test-retest reliability of the Spanish versions of the DFS and NS.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Development and validation of the Spanish Interval Scale of Anxiety Response (ISAR).
- Author
-
Heaton LJ, Garcia LJ, Gledhill LW, Beesley KA, and Coldwell SE
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Child, Epidemiologic Methods, Female, Humans, Language, Male, Translating, Dental Anxiety diagnosis, Psychometrics instrumentation
- Abstract
As increasing attention is paid to disparities in oral health care, cross-cultural means for assessing dental fear, a significant barrier to dental care, are in high demand. There is, however, a surprising shortage of Spanish-language dental fear measures in the literature, despite evidence of dental fear and avoidance in Spanish-speaking populations. The goals of the current series of studies were to develop and validate a Spanish-language version of the Interval Scale of Anxiety Response (ISAR). Magnitude estimation, a technique in which participants are asked to assign a number to indicate the perceived intensity of a stimulus or phrase, was used to compare the Spanish ISAR to the original English ISAR during the development studies. As a result of the 4 initial development studies, modifications were made to both the Spanish and English scales. Once 2 seemingly equivalent scales were established, validation studies were completed with native Spanish- and English-speaking dental patients. The results suggest that both the Spanish and modified English ISAR scales are valid measures of state anxiety associated with dental treatment. Additionally, the results of these studies highlight the importance of thoroughly testing translated measures to ensure they are accurately assessing that which they purport to measure.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Predicting anxiety during dental treatment using patients'self-reports: less is more.
- Author
-
Heaton LJ, Carlson CR, Smith TA, Baer RA, and de Leeuw R
- Subjects
- Adult, Age Factors, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Dental Anxiety psychology, Dentist-Patient Relations, Female, Humans, Linear Models, Male, Manifest Anxiety Scale, Middle Aged, Self-Assessment, Sex Factors, Dental Anxiety diagnosis
- Abstract
Background: Self-reported dental fear measures seldom are used in clinical practice to assess patients' fears. This study examined how well dental fear measures predicted anxious behaviors displayed during dental treatment., Methods: One hundred eight adult patients (54 percent female) in a periodontology clinic completed several paper-and-pencil demographic, dental fear and general anxiety measures before treatment. Dental practitioners, blinded to their patients' responses, rated their patients' anxiety during treatment on a series of 100-millimeter visual analog scales., Results: Higher Dental Fear Survey scores, younger age, more invasive treatment type and previous avoidance of dental care because of a bad experience all were predictive of greater observed anxiety. Neither self-reported nor observed anxiety was affected by previous experience with a particular practitioner or treatment., Conclusions: Dentists may assess patients' anxiety quickly and accurately with the Dental Fear Survey or a similar measure, as well as by asking patients about their current dental attendance and previous dental experiences.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Enhancing sedation treatment for the long- term: pre-treatment behavioural exposure.
- Author
-
Milgrom P and Heaton LJ
- Subjects
- Anesthesia, Dental psychology, Dental Anxiety prevention & control, Humans, Anesthesia, Dental methods, Conscious Sedation psychology, Dental Anxiety psychology
- Published
- 2007
47. The Child Dental Control Assessment (CDCA) in youth: reliability, validity and cross-cultural differences.
- Author
-
Coolidge T, Heima M, Heaton LJ, Nakai Y, Höskuldsson O, Smith TA, Weinstein P, and Milgrom P
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Australia epidemiology, Child, Female, Humans, Japan epidemiology, Male, Reproducibility of Results, United States epidemiology, Cross-Cultural Comparison, Dental Anxiety epidemiology, Dental Care for Children psychology, Surveys and Questionnaires
- Abstract
Aim: The Child Dental Control Assessment (CDCA) measures children's preferred control strategies in the dental situation. Three studies are reported, assessing aspects of this instrument in youths from the USA, Japan and Australia. In particular, measurements were made as to the reliability and validity of this instrument in this age group in the three cultures, as well as comparing some results across cultures., Study Design: These studies used a questionnaire design., Methods: Questionnaires (including the CDCA and other measures) were given to youths aged 11-15 in the three cultures. In one culture, youths received the questionnaire twice, to compute test-retest reliability., Results: The measure's reliability and validity were similar to those of other measures. The CDCA behaves similarly to the Revised Iowa Dental Control Index (R-IDCI). Youths in all three cultures showed similar responses, although the Japanese were less likely to endorse items., Statistics: Internal reliability of the scale ranged from 0.74 to 0.85. Test- retest reliability was 0.74. Participants in the High Desire/Low Predicted classification on the R-IDCI scored higher on the CDCA (t (73) = 2.9, p < .01). In the Japanese and Australian samples the correlation between CDCA and dental fear was 0.29-0.33 (p < .001). The Australian and USA samples scored significantly higher than the Japanese sample (overall F(2,1544) = 383.98, p < .001, followed by Tukey's HSD, p < .001)., Conclusions: These results provide evidence for the reliability and validity of the CDCA in youth. It appears to measure the discrepancy between Desired and Predicted Control identified in the Revised Iowa Dental Control Index (R-IDCI). Responses of the youth in all three cultures were similar, indicating common dental control preferences for individuals of this age. However, consistent with cultural values, Japanese youth were less likely to endorse the control strategies. These results underline the need to develop culturally-specific, as well as situationally-specific control measures.
- Published
- 2005
48. Factors influencing use of dental services in rural and urban communities: considerations for practitioners in underserved areas.
- Author
-
Heaton LJ, Smith TA, and Raybould TP
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Dental Anxiety epidemiology, Female, Health Education, Dental, Health Services Accessibility, Humans, Insurance, Dental, Kentucky, Male, Middle Aged, Patient Acceptance of Health Care, Regression Analysis, Rural Population, Self-Assessment, Surveys and Questionnaires, Urban Population, Dental Health Services statistics & numerical data, Medically Underserved Area
- Abstract
Individuals' utilization of dental services depends upon an array of factors, including access to care, financial restrictions, attitudes toward dental care, and dental fear. These factors, in turn, may vary across geographic locations and demographic groups. The goals of this study were to assess the use of dental services in both rural and urban areas of Kentucky and to examine challenges facing practitioners in rural areas. Individuals sampled from a rural population and patients in rural and urban dental clinics completed questionnaires about use of dental services, self-rated dental health, and dental fear. While these variables were strongly interrelated, differences emerged across locations. Patients in the urban area reported having more dental insurance but not better dental health. Patients in more rural areas reported seeking more emergency dental treatment but not more dental fear. While these factors are important considerations across locations, dental practitioners in rural areas in particular should be aware of barriers to dental care facing individuals in these areas. They have unique opportunities to provide education to their patients regarding the importance of dental care and the role of oral health in overall physical health.
- Published
- 2004
49. Fear of dental care: are we making any progress?
- Author
-
Smith TA and Heaton LJ
- Subjects
- Adult, Analysis of Variance, Chi-Square Distribution, Child, Humans, Manifest Anxiety Scale, United States epidemiology, Dental Anxiety epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: Dental anxiety has been a well-studied phenomenon since the late 1960s. The purpose of this literature review was to compare self-reported levels of dental anxiety during the past 50 years., Methods: The authors reviewed more than 200 articles and examined 19 studies involving more than 10,000 adults to assess any trends in dental anxiety. They investigated mean anxiety scores for college students and general adult samples using four measures of dental anxiety. Comparisons were made across publication year and location of study., Results: Analyses of variance suggest stability in dental anxiety scores over time and region within both types of study samples. Regardless of assessment length (single item or multi-item), the authors found no significant trends suggesting an increase or decrease in self-reported anxiety levels., Conclusions: These results suggest that despite an increase in general anxiety within the United States during the past 50 years, dental anxiety seems to have remained stable throughout the period., Practice Implications: The authors discuss the stable trend of self-reported dental anxiety levels in the context of increasing general anxiety in the United States and the current structure of individual dental practices.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Applicants' opinions about the selection process for oral and maxillofacial surgery programs.
- Author
-
Marciani RD, Smith TA, and Heaton LJ
- Subjects
- Adult, Curriculum, Dental Staff, Hospital, Educational Measurement, Faculty, Dental, Female, Humans, Interpersonal Relations, Interviews as Topic, Male, Personality, Retrospective Studies, Surgery, Oral trends, Surveys and Questionnaires, United States, Attitude of Health Personnel, Internship and Residency classification, Internship and Residency organization & administration, Internship and Residency trends, School Admission Criteria, Surgery, Oral education
- Abstract
Purpose: This study was conducted to investigate the characteristics of and opinions about the selection process of applicants to residency programs in oral and maxillofacial surgery (OMS) in the year 2000. The current investigation paralleled a survey completed in the 1970s, with additional questions to assess contemporary curriculum and surgical training evolution. Differences from the previous (1976) survey, a profile of applicants in 2000, and characteristics of OMS residency programs that applicants view as attractive are discussed., Subjects and Methods: Questionnaires were sent to 307 applicants to OMS residency programs registered in the dental matching program. To provide a more direct comparison of the study completed in 1977, the current questionnaire used the original survey as a model. It was divided into 6 sections: general information, information from the formal application and letters of recommendation, the interview, the selection process, the characteristics applicants were seeking in a program, and a retrospective review of programs visited., Results: In this study, 118 responses were received, representing 38% of the total. Respondents were predominately men (86%) and single, and attended dental school in all regions of the United States and the world. Respondents listed geographic location (65%) and national reputation (58%) as important factors for selecting programs to which to apply. Many respondents felt that a previous dental internship (85%), national board scores (83%), and class rank (79%) would be considered important in screening applicants for interview. A program's reputation, personalities of residents and attending staff, and clinical material were ranked as important factors contributing to program selection. Fifty-three of the 79 successful applicants reported that they were matched with their first-choice institution. Sixty percent of programs were considered worthy of revisiting by the respondents., Conclusions: Respondents in 2000 had more knowledge of the selection process before interviewing and submitted 2 times the number of applications than applicants in 1977. When selecting programs to which to apply, current applicants were less influenced by geographic location and the recommendations of other dentists. Applicants were attracted to programs that they perceive to have a good reputation and abundant clinical material. Residencies that convey a friendly atmosphere, favorable interpersonal skills of enrolled residents, and appealing personalities of the faculty were more attractive to candidates., (Copyright 2003 American Association of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons)
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.