Flaer Paul J, Younis Mustafa Z, Benjamin Paul L, Al Hajeri Maha
Dade County Dental Research Clinic, Jackson Memorial Medical Center, Florida, USA.
J Health Care Finance. 2010 Fall;37(1):101-8.
Dentistry for the underserved is more than an egalitarian social issue--it is a key factor in the health and social progress of our nation. The first signs or manifestations of several diseases such as varicella (i.e., chicken pox and shingles), STDs, and influenza become apparent in the oral cavity. The value of access to quality dentistry is an immeasurable factor in maintaining general medical health of people and fulfilling their psychosocial needs of pain reduction and enhanced cosmetics. In the United States, for the most part, only the middle and upper classes receive non-extraction, restorative, and prosthetic dentistry that is economically within their ability to pay. In addition, uninsured and poverty-level individuals often must face overwhelming long waiting lists, unnecessary referrals, lack of choice, and bureaucratic hurdles when seeking primary dental care. Therefore, it seems pertinent to put forth the question: What are the critical values and beliefs of psychosocial theory that can underscore the practice of dentistry for underserved populations in the United States?
The widely employed public health theory, the health belief model (HBM), is applied to evaluate psychosocial factors in dental care for the underserved. The HBM is used to predict and explain behavioral changes in dental health and associated belief patterns.
The HBM as applied to dentistry for the underserved predicts self-perceptions of susceptibility and seriousness of dental disease, health status, cues to action, and self-efficacy. Furthermore, patients can make judgments about benefits, costs, and risks of dental treatment.
A theoretical approach to dentistry employing the HBM, mediated by values and culture, can provide significant insights into patient thinking, beliefs, and perceptions. These insights can mediate access to and use of primary care dental services by underserved populations.
Evidence-based practice (i.e., based on research using the scientific method) has been put forth as the future of modern dentistry. However, the practice of dentistry need not just be evidence-based, but have its roots clearly grounded in theory.
为服务不足人群提供牙科服务不仅仅是一个平等主义的社会问题——它是我国健康和社会进步的关键因素。水痘(即水痘和带状疱疹)、性传播疾病和流感等几种疾病的最初迹象或表现会在口腔中显现出来。获得高质量牙科服务的价值对于维持人们的总体医疗健康以及满足他们减轻疼痛和改善容貌的心理社会需求而言,是一个不可估量的因素。在美国,在很大程度上,只有中上层阶级才能获得经济上他们有能力支付的非拔牙、修复和假牙修复牙科服务。此外,未参保和处于贫困水平的个人在寻求初级牙科护理时,往往必须面对漫长的等待名单、不必要的转诊、缺乏选择以及官僚主义障碍。因此,提出这样一个问题似乎是恰当的:心理社会理论的哪些关键价值观和信念能够强调为美国服务不足人群提供牙科服务的实践?
广泛应用的公共卫生理论——健康信念模型(HBM)被用于评估为服务不足人群提供牙科护理中的心理社会因素。HBM用于预测和解释牙科健康方面的行为变化以及相关的信念模式。
应用于为服务不足人群提供牙科服务的HBM预测了对牙科疾病易感性和严重性的自我认知、健康状况、行动线索以及自我效能感。此外,患者能够对牙科治疗的益处、成本和风险做出判断。
采用HBM并由价值观和文化介导的牙科理论方法能够为患者的思维、信念和认知提供重要见解。这些见解能够调节服务不足人群获得和使用初级牙科护理服务的情况。
循证实践(即基于使用科学方法的研究)已被提出作为现代牙科的未来发展方向。然而,牙科实践不仅应以证据为基础,还应明确扎根于理论。