Dental Experience, Anxiety, and Oral Health in Low-income Chilean Children
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2015Metadata
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Rojas Alcayaga, Gonzalo
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Dental Experience, Anxiety, and Oral Health in Low-income Chilean Children
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Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the relationship between early
dental experiences and clinical indicators of oral health and dental anxiety upon
admission to a comprehensive oral health program for six-year-old children in Chile.
Methods: One hundred twenty-nine six-year-old children were enrolled in the Recreo
Family Health Center of the Municipality of San Miguel, Santiago, Chile. Oral health
status was assessed based on the decayed, extracted, or filled teeth index, simplified
oral hygiene index, and Streptococcus mutans score. Dental anxiety was assessed
using the facial image scale and Frankl scale. Early dental experience was classified
as: no previous dental visits; preventive control; restorative treatment; and emergency
visit.
Results: Children who had previous experience of restorative treatment and
emergency visits showed greater dental caries damage (Kruskal-Wallis, P<.01).
Those who had emergency visits had the highest S. mutans score. There was no
relationship between the type of prior dental experience and the anxiety level or
oral hygiene index.
Conclusions: Invasive dental treatment resulted in greater susceptibility to dental
caries damage; however, these experiences did not influence dental anxiety levels.
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URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/137962
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Journal of Dentistry for Children-82-3, 2015
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