Title of article :
Childrenʹs dental anxiety in the United Kingdom in 2003
Author/Authors :
Nigel M. Nuttall، نويسنده , , Angela Gilbert، نويسنده , , John Morris، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Abstract :
Background
The prevalence of dental anxiety among a representative sample of children in the UK was determined in the Childrenʹs Dental Health survey of 2003.
Aims
This paper is concerned with the extent to which children in the United Kingdom are judged by a parent or carer to be behaviourally affected by dental anxiety and the factors associated with this.
Method
The information was gathered by self-completion questionnaire distributed to the parents of half of the sample of children who were also clinically examined in the dental survey.
Results
Dental anxiety that was sufficient to disrupt dental attendance was reported for around 3–4% of the four age groups surveyed (5, 8, 12 and 15 years of age). Childrenʹs dental anxiety was associated with parental dental anxiety; a greater experience of invasive dental treatment and general anaesthetic; receipt of free school meals and social class.
Conclusions
Whilst these findings do not necessarily indicate causal relationships, they do confirm a number of co-factors associated with dental anxiety perhaps most importantly that of anxiety with the experience of general anaesthetic for tooth extractions.
Keywords :
Dental anxietyChildrenDental survey
Journal title :
Journal of Dentistry
Journal title :
Journal of Dentistry