Chan Charlotte C K, Chan Alice K Y, Chu C H, Tsang Y C
Faculty of Dentistry, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, Hong Kong SAR, China.
Front Oral Health. 2023 Jan 25;4:1067092. doi: 10.3389/froh.2023.1067092. eCollection 2023.
Periodontal disease is a significant global health burden affecting half of the world's population. Given that plaque and inflammation control are essential to the attainment of periodontal health, recent trends in preventive dentistry have focused on the use of behavioral models to understand patient psychology and promote self-care and treatment compliance. In addition to their uses in classifying, explaining and predicting oral hygiene practices, behavioral models have been adopted in the design of oral hygiene interventions from individual to population levels. Despite the growing focus on behavioral modification in dentistry, the currently available evidence in the field of periodontology is scarce, and interventions have primarily measured changes in patient beliefs or performance in oral hygiene behaviors. Few studies have measured their impact on clinical outcomes, such as plaque levels, gingival bleeding and periodontal pocket reduction, which serve as indicators of the patient's disease status and quality of oral self-care. The present narrative review aims to summarize selected literature on the use of behavioral models to improve periodontal outcomes. A search was performed on existing behavioral models used to guide dental interventions to identify their use in interventions measuring periodontal parameters. The main models were identified and subsequently grouped by their underlying theoretical area of focus: patient beliefs (health belief model and cognitive behavioral principles); stages of readiness to change (precaution adoption process model and transtheoretical model); planning behavioral change (health action process approach model, theory of planned behavior and client self-care commitment model); and self-monitoring (self-regulation theory). Key constructs of each model and the findings of associated interventions were described. The COM-B model, a newer behavioral change system that has been increasingly used to guide interventions and policy changes, is discussed with reference to its use in oral health settings. Within the limitations of the available evidence, interventions addressing patient beliefs, motivation, intention and self-regulation could lead to improved outcomes in periodontal health. Direct comparisons between interventions could not be made due to differences in protocol design, research populations and follow-up periods. The conclusions of this review assist clinicians with implementing psychological interventions for oral hygiene promotion and highlight the need for additional studies on the clinical effects of behavioral model-based interventions.
牙周病是一项重大的全球健康负担,影响着全球一半的人口。鉴于菌斑和炎症控制对于实现牙周健康至关重要,预防牙科的最新趋势聚焦于运用行为模型来理解患者心理,并促进自我护理和治疗依从性。除了用于对口腔卫生习惯进行分类、解释和预测外,行为模型已被应用于从个体到人群层面的口腔卫生干预设计中。尽管牙科领域对行为改变的关注日益增加,但牙周病学领域目前可用的证据却很匮乏,而且干预措施主要衡量的是患者信念或口腔卫生行为表现的变化。很少有研究衡量它们对临床结果的影响,如菌斑水平、牙龈出血和牙周袋减少情况,这些是患者疾病状态和口腔自我护理质量的指标。本叙述性综述旨在总结关于使用行为模型改善牙周病治疗效果的相关文献。我们对用于指导牙科干预的现有行为模型进行了检索,以确定它们在测量牙周参数的干预措施中的应用。确定了主要模型,并随后根据其潜在的理论重点领域进行了分组:患者信念(健康信念模型和认知行为原则);改变准备阶段(预防采用过程模型和跨理论模型);计划行为改变(健康行动过程方法模型、计划行为理论和患者自我护理承诺模型);以及自我监测(自我调节理论)。描述了每个模型的关键结构以及相关干预措施的结果。还讨论了COM - B模型,这是一种越来越多地用于指导干预措施和政策变化的新型行为改变系统,及其在口腔健康环境中的应用。在现有证据的局限性内,针对患者信念、动机、意图和自我调节的干预措施可能会改善牙周健康状况。由于方案设计、研究人群和随访期的差异,无法对干预措施进行直接比较。本综述的结论有助于临床医生实施促进口腔卫生的心理干预措施,并强调需要对基于行为模型的干预措施的临床效果进行更多研究。