| Literature DB >> 34448277 |
Emilie Bryne1,2, Sarah Hean2, Kjersti Evensen1, Vibeke Bull1.
Abstract
Patients with dental phobia or a history of trauma tend to avoid dental services, which may, over time, lead to poor oral health. In Norway, a specific service targets these patients by providing exposure therapy to treat their fear of attendance and subsequently enable oral restoration. Dental practitioners deliver the exposure therapy, which requires a role change that deviates from their traditional practice. This paper explores how - and under what circumstances - dental practitioners manage this new role of alleviating dental anxiety for patients with a history of trauma or dental phobia. Using a realist evaluation approach, this paper develops theory describing which contexts promote mechanisms that allow practitioners to alleviate dental anxiety for patients with trauma or dental phobia. A multi-method approach, comprising service documents (n = 13) and stakeholder interviews (n = 12), was applied. The data were then analysed through a content analysis and context-mechanism-outcome heuristic tool. Our findings reveal that dental practitioners must adopt roles that enable trust, a safe space, and gradual desensitisation of the patient to their fear triggers. Adopting these roles requires time and resources to develop practitioners' skills - enabling them to adopt an appropriate communication style and exposure pace for each patient.Entities:
Keywords: abuse; cognitive behavioural therapy; dental phobia; professional role; torture
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34448277 DOI: 10.1111/eos.12820
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Oral Sci ISSN: 0909-8836 Impact factor: 2.612