Research abstract
British Dental Journal 195, 451 - 455 (2003)
Published online: 25 October 2003 | doi:10.1038/sj.bdj.4810600
Parental attitudes to the care of the carious primary dentition
M Tickle1, K M Milsom2, G M Humphris3 & A S Blinkhorn4
- This study examines parents' preferences for the dental care of their children and the influences on these choices.
- Approximately two thirds of parents preferred the dentist to decide on the treatment.
- If their child had a carious but symptomless primary tooth 33% of parents wanted the dentist to monitor the tooth but provide no treatment and only 6% would want the tooth restored.
- Parents whose children had experienced fillings or extractions in the past were more likely to show a preference for these treatments if their child had toothache.
- Parents living in deprived areas were more likely to choose extraction as a treatment option than parents living in more affluent areas.
Abstract
Objectives To examine parents' attitudes to the dental care of their children, taking into account the family's socio-economic background, dentally-related behaviour including the child's level of dental anxiety and dental treatment history.
Methods A cross sectional study of all 5-year-old children living in Ellesmere Port and Chester. All children were clinically examined; dmft and its components were recorded. A postal questionnaire was sent to the children's parents to measure their preferences for dental care with reference to two scenarios, (1) if their child had a carious but asymptomatic primary tooth, or (2) if their child had a carious primary tooth which was causing toothache. Parents were also asked to provide information on the dental attendance pattern of their child and an assessment of their child's dental anxiety. Family socio-economic status was recorded using the Townsend material deprivation index of the electoral ward in which they resided.
Results Questionnaires were distributed to the home addresses of the 1,745 children who were clinically examined, and 1,437 were returned, giving a response rate of 82%. In both scenarios the majority of parents were happy to leave the decision on treatment to the dentist. In the asymptomatic tooth scenario, approximately one third of parents wanted the tooth to remain untreated but periodically monitored, only 6% expressed a desire to have their child's tooth restored. Multivariate analysis showed that parents of children who had a filling (OR 4.32 95%CI 2.21–8.43) or extraction (OR 2.24 95%CI 1.11–4.53) in the past were significantly more likely to want restorative care for their children. In the scenario where the child had toothache, multivariate analysis confirmed that parents had a preference for an intervention (extraction or filling) if they lived in a deprived area (Townsend score OR 1.10, 95% CI 1.04, 1.16) or if their child had had an extraction (OR 4.35, 95% CI 1.59, 11.88) or filling (OR 2.39, 95% CI 1.05, 5.45) in the past, after controlling for gender, attendance and parentally reported anxiety. When preference for an extraction was considered as the dependent variable, there was no significant relationship with past restorative treatment. In both scenarios there was no association between parentally reported anxiety of the child and parental preferences for treatment.
Conclusions In this part of the UK, there was little explicit support amongst parents for the restoration of asymptomatic carious primary teeth. Parental expectations for the dental care of young children with caries in their primary teeth, were closely related to the treatment experiences of the child. Families living in deprived areas expressed a preference for more interventionist care than their more affluent counterparts. Parentally judged anxiety of the child or their past dental attendance behaviour had no association with parents' preferences for the care of their children.
- Senior Lecturer\Consultant in Dental Public Health, Department of Dental Medicine and Surgery, Manchester University Dental Hospital
- Consultant in Dental Public Health, Department of Dental Research and Development, Chester and Halton Community NHS Trust
- Reader in Clinical Psychology, Department of Clinical Psychology, School of Psychiatry and Behavioural Sciences, University of Manchester
- Professor of Oral Health, Department of Dental Medicine and Surgery, Manchester University Dental Hospital
Correspondence to: M Tickle1
Manchester University Dental Hospital, Higher Cambridge Street, Manchester, M15 6FH
e-mail: martin.tickle@man.ac.uk
