Sobotta Bernhard A J, John Mike T, Nitschke Ina
Department of Prosthodontics and Materials Science, University of Leipzig, Leipzig, Germany.
J Travel Med. 2008 Jan-Feb;15(1):19-24. doi: 10.1111/j.1708-8305.2007.00162.x.
Although more than 100 million passengers have taken a cruise since 1980, it is not known what dental treatment needs occur at sea.
The routine dental documentation of a 2-month period at sea on a cruise ship carrying 1,619 passengers was analyzed. The subjects for the study were 57 passengers (3.5% of 1,619), with a mean age of 71 years (+/-9.8 y). Age, gender, number of natural teeth and implants, prosthetic status, diagnosis, treatment performed, percentage of emergency and routine procedures, number of appointments, duration of appointment, time since last visit to the dentist, and cabin category as indicator of socioeconomic status were extracted. Oral health-related quality of life (OHRQoL) was measured using the 14-item Oral Health Impact Profile.
Passengers had a mean number of 20 natural teeth plus substantial fixed and removable prosthodontics. Emergency dental treatment accounted for 97% of the chairside time. The three most frequent emergency diagnoses were defective restorations (36%), pulpal disease (20%), and defective prosthesis and caries (both 11.5%). Common emergency therapies provided were complex surgical-prosthodontic rehabilitation, various endodontic treatments, and extractions. Per 1,000 persons/month, passengers required 21.6 emergency plus 2.5 routine appointments; 49% of passengers had seen a dentist within 3 months before going to sea.
Passengers do attend their dentist for routine care/checkups before the voyage, yet experience complex dental emergencies. This is due to the presence of a high number of restorations that fail unexpectedly. Some failures are so severe that they would have forced the passenger to abort the cruise had there been no dental service available. The ease of access to quality dental care may explain the relatively low level of perceived problems as characterized by OHRQoL scores.
自1980年以来,已有超过1亿乘客乘坐过游轮,但海上的牙科治疗需求情况尚不清楚。
对一艘载有1619名乘客的游轮上为期2个月的常规牙科记录进行了分析。研究对象为57名乘客(占1619名乘客的3.5%),平均年龄为71岁(±9.8岁)。提取了年龄、性别、天然牙和种植牙数量、修复状态、诊断、所进行的治疗、急诊和常规程序的百分比、预约次数、预约时长、上次看牙医后的时间以及作为社会经济地位指标的客舱类别。使用14项口腔健康影响量表测量口腔健康相关生活质量(OHRQoL)。
乘客平均有20颗天然牙,还有大量固定和可摘义齿修复体。急诊牙科治疗占椅旁治疗时间的97%。最常见的三种急诊诊断为修复体缺陷(36%)、牙髓病(20%)以及义齿缺陷和龋齿(均为11.5%)。常见的急诊治疗包括复杂的外科 - 修复性康复治疗、各种牙髓治疗和拔牙。每1000人/月,乘客需要21.6次急诊加2.5次常规预约;49%的乘客在出海前3个月内看过牙医。
乘客在航行前确实会去看牙医进行常规护理/检查,但仍会经历复杂的牙科急诊。这是由于存在大量意外失败的修复体。有些失败情况非常严重,如果没有牙科服务,乘客可能会被迫中断游轮之旅。获得优质牙科护理的便利性可能解释了以OHRQoL评分所表征的相对较低的感知问题水平。