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Elementos cognitivos podrían tener relación con la ansiedad dental en niños

Fuente: European Journal of Oral Sciences 120(1): 75-81, febrero de 2012 Primer autor: Maria Carrillo-Díaz Centro: Universidad Rey Juan Carlos, facultad de Ciencias de la Salud, departamento de Odontología Pediátrica (Madrid, España)

SINC | 30 marzo 2012 08:00

Título: Treatment experience, frequency of dental visits, and children's dental fear: a cognitive approach

Resumen :

Cognitive elements play a key role in dental anxiety. Nevertheless, relatively little is known about how dental treatments and frequency of visits to the dentist are related to dental fear and its cognitive antecedents. This study aimed to explore the relationships between dental visits, past treatment experiences, expectations on the aversiveness/ probability of negative dental events, and dental fear in children.

The participants were 147 children (60% female; mean age = 12.0 yr) who completed a questionnaire comprising measures of dental treatment-related experience (attendance, fillings, and extractions), perceived aversiveness and probability of dental events, and dental anxiety. Bivariate correlations and multiple linear regression analyses were used to analyze the data. A higher frequency of dental visits was associated with less dental fear and a decreased belief in the probability of negative events occurring during treatment. The type of treatments received was not directly linked to dental fear. However, having received fillings was significantly associated with the perceived probability of negative dental events, whereas extractions were positively associated with these expectations but negatively associated with the perceived aversiveness of possible dental events. Regular dental visits, as well as dental treatments, can influence, in different ways, cognitive elements associated with dental anxiety in children.

Autores : Carrillo-Diaz, M.; Crego, A.; Armfield, J.M.; Romero-Maroto, M.

Direcciones :

1. Universidad Rey Juan Carlos, facultad de Ciencias de la Salud, departamento de Odontología Pediátrica (Madrid, España)

2. Universidad Rey Juan Carlos, facultad de Ciencias de la Salud, departamento de Psicología (Madrid, España)

3. Universidad Adelaide, Sch Dent, Australian Res Ctr Populat Oral Hlth (Adelaide, Australia)

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Zona geográfica: España
Fuente: SINC

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