| Literature DB >> 31317603 |
Markus Höglund1,2, Mats Bågesund3,4, Shervin Shahnavaz5,6, Inger Wårdh2,7.
Abstract
The aim of this study was to evaluate the ability of dental clinicians to rate dental anxiety. A total of 104 clinicians from 24 public dental clinics in the Region of Östergötland, Sweden, examined 1,128 adult patients undergoing their regular dental examination. The patients rated their dental anxiety using the Modified Dental Anxiety Scale and a Visual Analogue Scale. After the examination, the clinicians rated the patients' levels of dental anxiety on a Visual Analogue Scale. The correlation (rs ) between the clinicians' and patients' ratings of dental anxiety was 0.45. Among highly dentally anxious patients, there was no correlation between clinicians' and patients' ratings. Dental clinicians rated dental anxiety lower than their patients did, especially if the patients were highly anxious. The ability of clinicians to rate dental anxiety was better when the clinician was older and the patient was older. There was an inverse association between clinicians' confidence and their ability to rate a patient's dental anxiety. In conclusion, clinicians are unsuccessful in identifying a dentally anxious patient without the concurrent use of patient self-assessment tools. A Visual Analogue Scale is a suitable screening tool in general practice for detection of dental anxiety.Entities:
Keywords: Visual Analogue Scale; dental staff; diagnosis
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31317603 PMCID: PMC6790589 DOI: 10.1111/eos.12648
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Oral Sci ISSN: 0909-8836 Impact factor: 2.612
Demographic characteristics of clinicians and their questionnaire answers
| Demographics/Questionnaire responses | Data value |
|---|---|
| Clinician gender | |
| Male | 15 (14.4) |
| Female | 89 (85.6) |
| Clinician profession | |
| General dentist | 43 (41.3) |
| Dental hygienist | 61 (58.7) |
| Country of education | |
| Sweden | 86 (82.7) |
| Other | 18 (17.3) |
| Special training in dental anxiety | |
| Yes | 83 (79.8) |
| No | 21 (20.2) |
| Special interest in dental anxiety | |
| Yes | 51 (49.0) |
| No | 53 (51.0) |
| Clinician age (yr) | 25–66 (45.2) |
| Rated dental anxiety | 0–99 (15.8) |
| Years of experience | 0–40 (15.5) |
| Rated patient tenseness | 0–100 (19.2) |
| Confidence in ability to handle dentally anxious patients | 27–98 (74.3) |
Values are given as n (%) or range (mean).
On a Visual Analogue Scale (VAS).
Demographic characteristics of patients and their questionnaire answers
| Demographics/Questionnaire responses | Data value |
|---|---|
| Patient gender | |
| Male | 561 (49.7) |
| Female | 567 (50.3) |
| Patient age (yr) | 18–99 (40.0) |
| Years of education | 0–30 (13.5) |
| Modified Dental Anxiety Scale | 5–25 (9.3) |
| Dental anxiety | 0–100 (19.0) |
| Confidence in handling their dental anxiety | 0–100 (67.9) |
Values are given as n (%) or range (mean).
On a Visual Analogue Scale (VAS).
Spearman correlations (r s) between MDAS†, pDA‐VAS‡, cDA‐VAS§, patient tenseness¶, and patient's confidence in handling DA**
| MDAS | pDA‐VAS | cDA‐VAS | Patient tenseness | Patient's confidence in handling DA | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MDAS | 1 | 0.80 | 0.45 | 0.40 | −0.33 |
| pDA‐VAS | 1 | 0.47 | 0.41 | −0.38 | |
| cDA‐VAS | 1 | 0.86 | −0.20 | ||
| Patient tenseness | 1 | −0.17 |
P < 0.001.
Patient's Modified Dental Anxiety Scale (MDAS).
Patient's estimation of dental anxiety on a 100‐mm Visual Analogue Scale (VAS).
Clinician's rating of patient's dental anxiety (cDA‐VAS) on a 100‐mm VAS.
Clinician's rating of patient tenseness on a 100‐mm VAS.
Patient's confidence in handling dental anxiety (DA) on a 100‐mm VAS.
Figure 1Scatterplot of patients’ Modified Dental Anxiety Scale (MDAS) rating versus clinicians’ rating of patients’ dental anxiety on a 100‐mm Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) (cDA‐VAS). The red zone marks highly anxious patients (MDAS ≥19).
Spearman correlations (r s) between MDAS† and cDA‐VAS,‡ according to age groups
|
Young 18–36 yr ( |
Old 36–99 yr ( | |
|---|---|---|
|
Young 25–45 yr ( | 0.38 | 0.42 |
|
Old 46–66 yr ( | 0.49 | 0.51 |
P < 0.001.
Patient's Modified Dental Anxiety Scale (MDAS).
Dental clinician's estimation of patient's dental anxiety (cDA‐VAS) on a 100‐mm Visual Analogue Scale.
Division between young and old by median split.
Results of linear regression analysis of the DA‐DIFF* as a function of possible influential factors
| Factor |
| 95% CI |
|---|---|---|
| Patient | ||
| MDAS | −2.25 | −2.52 to −1.99 |
| Age (yr) | 0.06 | 0.00 to 0.12 |
| Male gender | −0.57 | −2.58 to 1.43 |
| Confidence in handling their dental anxiety | −0.01 | −0.04 to 0.03 |
| Years of education | <0.01 | −0.31 to 0.31 |
| Clinician | ||
| Age (yr) | 0.18 | 0.03 to 0.33 |
| If a dentist | 3.36 | 0.42 to 6.30 |
| Confidence in ability to handle dentally anxious patients | −0.09 | −0.18 to −0.01 |
| Male gender | −2.65 | −6.34 to 1.05 |
| With special training in dental anxiety | 1.99 | −1.05 to 5.03 |
| Country of education | −1.97 | −5.29 to 1.35 |
| Years of experience | −0.03 | −0.20 to 0.13 |
| Interest in dental anxiety | −0.48 | −2.83 to 1.87 |
| (Constant) | −3.4 | −16.30 to 9.50 |
Clinician's rating of patient's dental anxiety (cDA‐VAS) on a 100‐mm Visual Analogue Scale minus the patient's Modified Dental Anxiety Scale (MDAS) score.
Figure 2Scatterplot of patients’ Modified Dental Anxiety Scale (MDAS) versus the difference between clinicians’ and patients’ reported dental anxiety (DA‐DIFF).