Saemundsson S R, Slade G D, Spencer A J, Davies M J
Department of Dental Ecology, School of Dentistry, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, USA.
Pediatr Dent. 1997 Jul-Aug;19(5):331-8.
Despite the growing emphasis on targeting care to high-risk groups, little is known about the factors used by clinicians to designate risk. This study investigates the degree to which factors measured in a typical dental health survey are used by clinicians in assigning children to dental disease risk groups. A random sample of 9690 children aged 5-15 years was selected from the South Australian School Dental Service. Dentists or dental therapists judged each child as low-, medium-, or high-risk for dental disease. Clinicians recorded caries experience (DMFS/dmfs), and children's parents completed a questionnaire on dental behaviors and socioeconomic status (SES). Two binary logistic models were fitted using the risk grouping as the outcome variable, one comparing low- with moderate-risk and the other comparing moderate- with high-risk. Sixty percent of children were judged as moderate-risk, 27% as low-risk, and only 13% as high-risk. In the logistic models, proximal DMFS/dmfs were stronger predictors of assignment to the higher-risk groups than were factors indicating past occlusal caries, while factors describing caries on buccal or lingual surfaces appeared unimportant. Untreated lesions on permanent and primary teeth were among the strongest predictors of assignment to the higher-risk groups. Other significant factors (P < 0.05) were: exposure to professionally applied fluoride and sealants, country of birth, frequency of toothbrushing, and exposure to fluoridated water. No SES factors reached significance. The models explained nearly one-half the variation in the risk predictions. Clinical markers of past caries experience explained the greatest variation in the judgments, showing that clinicians base their risk predictions largely on children's past disease. The three types of surfaces contribute unevenly to the judgments and unrestored caries was the largest contributor to the decision.
尽管越来越强调针对高危群体提供医疗服务,但对于临床医生用于确定风险的因素却知之甚少。本研究调查了临床医生在将儿童分配到牙科疾病风险组时,使用典型牙科健康调查中所测量因素的程度。从南澳大利亚州学校牙科服务中心随机抽取了9690名5至15岁的儿童。牙医或牙科治疗师将每个儿童判定为低、中或高牙科疾病风险。临床医生记录了龋齿经历(DMFS/dmfs),儿童家长完成了一份关于牙科行为和社会经济地位(SES)的问卷。使用风险分组作为结果变量拟合了两个二元逻辑模型,一个比较低风险与中等风险,另一个比较中等风险与高风险。60%的儿童被判定为中等风险,27%为低风险,只有13%为高风险。在逻辑模型中,近端DMFS/dmfs比过去咬合面龋齿的指标更能有力地预测被分配到更高风险组,而描述颊面或舌面龋齿的因素似乎并不重要。恒牙和乳牙上未治疗的病变是被分配到更高风险组的最强预测因素之一。其他显著因素(P < 0.05)包括:接受专业应用的氟化物和窝沟封闭剂、出生国家、刷牙频率以及接触含氟水。没有SES因素达到显著水平。这些模型解释了风险预测中近一半的变异。过去龋齿经历的临床指标解释了判断中最大的变异,表明临床医生的风险预测主要基于儿童过去的疾病。三种类型的表面对判断的贡献不均衡,未修复的龋齿是决策的最大贡献因素。