Dental Fear and Dental Health and Attendance among Finnish Male Prisoners

Objectives: The aim of the present study was to evaluate the prevalence of dental fear and the associations between dental fear and dental health and dental attendance among Finnish prisoners. Material and Methods: Eighty-nine voluntary male prisoners from the Pelso Prison participated in this cr...

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Main Authors: Raija Vainionpää, Paula Pesonen, Marja-Liisa Laitala, Vesa Pohjola, Vuokko Anttonen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Stilus Optimus 2019-12-01
Series:eJournal of Oral Maxillofacial Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.ejomr.org/JOMR/archives/2019/4/e4/v10n4e4ht.htm
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spelling doaj-4046efdadb6d449eba6d45d383a622682020-11-25T02:43:29ZengStilus OptimuseJournal of Oral Maxillofacial Research2029-283X2019-12-01104e410.5037/jomr.2019.10404Dental Fear and Dental Health and Attendance among Finnish Male PrisonersRaija VainionpääPaula PesonenMarja-Liisa LaitalaVesa PohjolaVuokko AnttonenObjectives: The aim of the present study was to evaluate the prevalence of dental fear and the associations between dental fear and dental health and dental attendance among Finnish prisoners. Material and Methods: Eighty-nine voluntary male prisoners from the Pelso Prison participated in this cross-sectional clinical study between September 2014 and February 2015. Forty-six (51.7%) of them were also interviewed for their background factors, dental fear and dental attendance. To evaluate the prisoners’ level of dental fear, the Modified Dental Anxiety Scale and Dental Visual Analogue Scale were used. The numbers of decayed, missing, filled and remaining teeth reported dental health. For analyses Pearson’s Chi-square test, Fisher’s exact test, logistic regression analyses and the independent samples Kruskall-Wallis test were conducted. Results: Among male prisoners four out of 46 (8.7%) reported severe and fourteen out of 46 (30.4%) moderate dental fear, 60.9% had mild or no dental fear. Those with no dental fear visited a dentist regularly more often than those with dental fear. The use of snuff and number of medications were positively associated with severe dental fear. Conclusions: Dental fear is common among Finnish male prisoners. High number of prescribed medications, use of snuff and irregular dental attendance may indicate severe dental fear among Finnish male prisoners. https://www.ejomr.org/JOMR/archives/2019/4/e4/v10n4e4ht.htmdental anxietyodontophobiadental feardelivery of dental careprisoners
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Raija Vainionpää
Paula Pesonen
Marja-Liisa Laitala
Vesa Pohjola
Vuokko Anttonen
spellingShingle Raija Vainionpää
Paula Pesonen
Marja-Liisa Laitala
Vesa Pohjola
Vuokko Anttonen
Dental Fear and Dental Health and Attendance among Finnish Male Prisoners
eJournal of Oral Maxillofacial Research
dental anxiety
odontophobia
dental fear
delivery of dental care
prisoners
author_facet Raija Vainionpää
Paula Pesonen
Marja-Liisa Laitala
Vesa Pohjola
Vuokko Anttonen
author_sort Raija Vainionpää
title Dental Fear and Dental Health and Attendance among Finnish Male Prisoners
title_short Dental Fear and Dental Health and Attendance among Finnish Male Prisoners
title_full Dental Fear and Dental Health and Attendance among Finnish Male Prisoners
title_fullStr Dental Fear and Dental Health and Attendance among Finnish Male Prisoners
title_full_unstemmed Dental Fear and Dental Health and Attendance among Finnish Male Prisoners
title_sort dental fear and dental health and attendance among finnish male prisoners
publisher Stilus Optimus
series eJournal of Oral Maxillofacial Research
issn 2029-283X
publishDate 2019-12-01
description Objectives: The aim of the present study was to evaluate the prevalence of dental fear and the associations between dental fear and dental health and dental attendance among Finnish prisoners. Material and Methods: Eighty-nine voluntary male prisoners from the Pelso Prison participated in this cross-sectional clinical study between September 2014 and February 2015. Forty-six (51.7%) of them were also interviewed for their background factors, dental fear and dental attendance. To evaluate the prisoners’ level of dental fear, the Modified Dental Anxiety Scale and Dental Visual Analogue Scale were used. The numbers of decayed, missing, filled and remaining teeth reported dental health. For analyses Pearson’s Chi-square test, Fisher’s exact test, logistic regression analyses and the independent samples Kruskall-Wallis test were conducted. Results: Among male prisoners four out of 46 (8.7%) reported severe and fourteen out of 46 (30.4%) moderate dental fear, 60.9% had mild or no dental fear. Those with no dental fear visited a dentist regularly more often than those with dental fear. The use of snuff and number of medications were positively associated with severe dental fear. Conclusions: Dental fear is common among Finnish male prisoners. High number of prescribed medications, use of snuff and irregular dental attendance may indicate severe dental fear among Finnish male prisoners.
topic dental anxiety
odontophobia
dental fear
delivery of dental care
prisoners
url https://www.ejomr.org/JOMR/archives/2019/4/e4/v10n4e4ht.htm
work_keys_str_mv AT raijavainionpaa dentalfearanddentalhealthandattendanceamongfinnishmaleprisoners
AT paulapesonen dentalfearanddentalhealthandattendanceamongfinnishmaleprisoners
AT marjaliisalaitala dentalfearanddentalhealthandattendanceamongfinnishmaleprisoners
AT vesapohjola dentalfearanddentalhealthandattendanceamongfinnishmaleprisoners
AT vuokkoanttonen dentalfearanddentalhealthandattendanceamongfinnishmaleprisoners
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