The School of Dentistry, The University of Leeds, Leeds, UK.
BMC Oral Health. 2023 May 27;23(1):332. doi: 10.1186/s12903-023-03030-x.
Despite significant progress in the control of oral diseases since the discovery of fluoride in the 1940s, dental caries and periodontal diseases continue to affect a significant proportion of the population, particularly socially disadvantaged and lower socioeconomic groups. The National Health Service in England provides preventive advice and treatments as part of an oral health assessment, and evidence-based guidance recommends the use of fissure sealants and topical fluorides in addition to dietary and oral hygiene advice. Although oral health promotion and education have become expected parts of dental care, the need for restorative treatments remains relatively high. We aimed to explore how barriers to preventive advice and treatment for NHS patients may be hindering the provision of prevention in oral health to patients from the perspectives of multiple key stakeholders.
Semi-structured interviews and focus groups were undertaken between March 2016-February 2017 with four groups of stakeholders: dentists, insurers, policy makers and patient participants. The interviews were analysed using deductive, reflexive thematic analysis.
Thirty-two stakeholders participated: 6 dentists, 5 insurers, 10 policy makers, and 11 patient participants. Four themes were developed: Perspectives on the clarity of oral health messaging and patient's knowledge, The variability of prioritising prevention, Influences of the dentist-patient relationship on effective communication and Motivation to enact positive oral health behaviours.
The findings from this research indicate that patients' knowledge of and priority placed on prevention is variable. Participants believed that more targeted education could be valuable in enhancing these. A patient's relationship with their dentist could also influence their level of knowledge through the information shared with them, their receptivity to the preventive messages and the value they place on it. However, even with knowledge, prioritising prevention and a good patient-dentist relationship, without motivation to engage in preventive behaviour the impact of these is reduced. Our findings are discussed in relation to the COM-B model of behaviour change.
自 20 世纪 40 年代发现氟化物以来,尽管在控制口腔疾病方面取得了重大进展,但龋齿和牙周病仍继续影响着相当一部分人群,尤其是社会弱势群体和较低社会经济群体。英格兰国民保健制度提供预防建议和治疗,作为口腔健康评估的一部分,循证指南建议除了饮食和口腔卫生建议外,还使用窝沟封闭剂和局部氟化物。尽管口腔健康促进和教育已成为牙科护理的预期内容,但修复治疗的需求仍然相对较高。我们旨在从多个利益相关者的角度探讨 NHS 患者预防建议和治疗的障碍如何阻碍向患者提供口腔健康预防。
2016 年 3 月至 2017 年 2 月,我们对四组利益相关者进行了半结构化访谈和焦点小组讨论:牙医、保险公司、政策制定者和患者参与者。使用演绎、反思性主题分析对访谈进行了分析。
32 名利益相关者参与:6 名牙医、5 名保险公司、10 名政策制定者和 11 名患者参与者。确定了四个主题:对口腔健康信息传递和患者知识的清晰度的看法、预防的优先顺序的可变性、牙医与患者关系对有效沟通的影响以及采取积极口腔健康行为的动机。
这项研究的结果表明,患者对预防的认识和重视程度存在差异。参与者认为,更有针对性的教育可能会增加这方面的知识。患者与牙医的关系也可以通过与他们分享信息、他们对预防信息的接受程度以及他们对预防信息的重视程度来影响他们的知识水平。然而,即使有知识、优先考虑预防以及良好的医患关系,如果没有参与预防行为的动机,这些因素的影响也会降低。我们的研究结果与行为改变的 COM-B 模型进行了讨论。