Brennan David S, Spencer A John
Professor, Social and Preventive Dentistry, AIHW Dental Statistics and Research Unit, Australian Research Centre for Population Oral Health, Dental School, Faculty of Health Sciences, The University of Adelaide, South Australia.
Popul Health Metr. 2004 Sep 3;2(1):7. doi: 10.1186/1478-7954-2-7.
Australian burden of disease estimates appeared inconsistent with the reported repetitive and ubiquitous nature of dental problems. The aims of the study were to measure the nature, severity and duration of symptoms for specific oral conditions, and calculate disability weights from these measures. METHODS: Data were collected in 2001-02 from a random sample of South Australian dentists using mailed self-complete questionnaires. Dentists recorded the diagnosis of dental problems and provided patients with self-complete questionnaires to record the nature, severity and duration of symptoms using the EuroQol instrument. Data were available from 378 dentists (response rate = 60%). RESULTS: Disability weights were highest for pulpal infection (0.069), caries (0.044) and dentinal sensitivity (0.040), followed by denture problems (0.026), periodontal disease (0.023), failed restorations (0.019), tooth fractures (0.014) and tooth wear (0.011). Aesthetic problems had a low disability weight (0.002), and both recall/maintenance care and oral hygiene had adjusted weights of zero. CONCLUSIONS: Disability weights for caries (0.044), periodontal disease (0.023) and denture problems (0.026) in this study were higher than comparable oral health conditions in the Australian Burden of Disease and Injury Study (0.005 for caries involving a filling and 0.014 for caries involving an extraction, 0.007 for periodontal disease, and 0.004 for edentulism). A range of common problems such as pulpal infection, failed restorations and tooth fracture that were not included in the Australian Burden of Disease and Injury Study had relatively high disability weights. The inclusion of a fuller range of oral health problems along with revised disability weights would result in oral health accounting for a larger amount of disability than originally estimated.
澳大利亚疾病负担估计似乎与所报告的牙科问题的重复性和普遍性不一致。本研究的目的是测量特定口腔疾病症状的性质、严重程度和持续时间,并根据这些测量结果计算残疾权重。
2001年至2002年,通过邮寄自填问卷的方式,从南澳大利亚州的牙医随机样本中收集数据。牙医记录牙科问题的诊断,并向患者提供自填问卷,使用欧洲生活质量量表(EuroQol)记录症状的性质、严重程度和持续时间。共有378名牙医提供了数据(回复率 = 60%)。
牙髓感染(0.069)、龋齿(0.044)和牙本质敏感(0.040)的残疾权重最高,其次是假牙问题(0.026)、牙周疾病(0.023)、修复失败(0.019)、牙齿骨折(0.014)和牙齿磨损(0.011)。美学问题的残疾权重较低(0.002),复诊/维护护理和口腔卫生的调整权重均为零。
本研究中龋齿(0.044)、牙周疾病(0.023)和假牙问题(0.026)的残疾权重高于《澳大利亚疾病和伤害负担研究》中可比的口腔健康状况(涉及补牙的龋齿为0.005,涉及拔牙的龋齿为0.014,牙周疾病为0.007,无牙为0.004)。一系列未纳入《澳大利亚疾病和伤害负担研究》的常见问题,如牙髓感染、修复失败和牙齿骨折,具有相对较高的残疾权重。纳入更全面的口腔健康问题以及修订后的残疾权重,将使口腔健康在残疾中所占比例高于最初估计。