Sensitivity to change of oral and general health-related quality of life during prosthodontic treatment

Standard

Sensitivity to change of oral and general health-related quality of life during prosthodontic treatment. / Wickert, Melanie; John, Mike T; Schierz, Oliver; Hirsch, Christian; Aarabi, Ghazal; Reissmann, Daniel R.

In: EUR J ORAL SCI, Vol. 122, No. 1, 01.02.2014, p. 70-7.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Wickert, M, John, MT, Schierz, O, Hirsch, C, Aarabi, G & Reissmann, DR 2014, 'Sensitivity to change of oral and general health-related quality of life during prosthodontic treatment', EUR J ORAL SCI, vol. 122, no. 1, pp. 70-7.

APA

Wickert, M., John, M. T., Schierz, O., Hirsch, C., Aarabi, G., & Reissmann, D. R. (2014). Sensitivity to change of oral and general health-related quality of life during prosthodontic treatment. EUR J ORAL SCI, 122(1), 70-7.

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{486119106f8248d282969d05ae5dad1b,
title = "Sensitivity to change of oral and general health-related quality of life during prosthodontic treatment",
abstract = "The literature presents conflicting findings on whether health-related quality of life (HRQoL) measures have sufficient evaluative properties to assess changes caused by dental interventions. The aim of our study was to compare sensitivity to change in HRQoL and OHRQoL in prosthodontic patients. In this prospective intervention study, a total of 165 consecutively recruited patients completed the Short Form-36 (SF-36) and the 49-item Oral Health Impact Profile (OHIP), as self-administered questionnaires, before prosthodontic treatment and 1 month after treatment was finished. Differences in SF-36 and OHIP scores between baseline and follow up were tested for statistical significance using paired t-tests. Effect sizes (Cohen's d) were calculated. Health-related quality of life improved during prosthodontic treatment, indicated by a slight, but statistically significant, increase in the SF-36 physical component (difference: 1.0 points), whereas perceived mental health did not change substantially (difference: −0.5 points). Improvement in OHRQoL (difference in OHIP sum score: −6.7 points) was statistically significant. Although the OHIP effect size (of 0.2) was considered as small, according to guidelines, it was greater than for the SF-36 component scores (physical: 0.1; mental: 0.1). Sensitivity to change in quality of life measures was greater for OHRQoL than for HRQoL, limiting the usefulness of HRQoL as an outcome measure in dentistry.",
author = "Melanie Wickert and John, {Mike T} and Oliver Schierz and Christian Hirsch and Ghazal Aarabi and Reissmann, {Daniel R}",
year = "2014",
month = feb,
day = "1",
language = "English",
volume = "122",
pages = "70--7",
journal = "EUR J ORAL SCI",
issn = "0909-8836",
publisher = "Blackwell Munksgaard",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Sensitivity to change of oral and general health-related quality of life during prosthodontic treatment

AU - Wickert, Melanie

AU - John, Mike T

AU - Schierz, Oliver

AU - Hirsch, Christian

AU - Aarabi, Ghazal

AU - Reissmann, Daniel R

PY - 2014/2/1

Y1 - 2014/2/1

N2 - The literature presents conflicting findings on whether health-related quality of life (HRQoL) measures have sufficient evaluative properties to assess changes caused by dental interventions. The aim of our study was to compare sensitivity to change in HRQoL and OHRQoL in prosthodontic patients. In this prospective intervention study, a total of 165 consecutively recruited patients completed the Short Form-36 (SF-36) and the 49-item Oral Health Impact Profile (OHIP), as self-administered questionnaires, before prosthodontic treatment and 1 month after treatment was finished. Differences in SF-36 and OHIP scores between baseline and follow up were tested for statistical significance using paired t-tests. Effect sizes (Cohen's d) were calculated. Health-related quality of life improved during prosthodontic treatment, indicated by a slight, but statistically significant, increase in the SF-36 physical component (difference: 1.0 points), whereas perceived mental health did not change substantially (difference: −0.5 points). Improvement in OHRQoL (difference in OHIP sum score: −6.7 points) was statistically significant. Although the OHIP effect size (of 0.2) was considered as small, according to guidelines, it was greater than for the SF-36 component scores (physical: 0.1; mental: 0.1). Sensitivity to change in quality of life measures was greater for OHRQoL than for HRQoL, limiting the usefulness of HRQoL as an outcome measure in dentistry.

AB - The literature presents conflicting findings on whether health-related quality of life (HRQoL) measures have sufficient evaluative properties to assess changes caused by dental interventions. The aim of our study was to compare sensitivity to change in HRQoL and OHRQoL in prosthodontic patients. In this prospective intervention study, a total of 165 consecutively recruited patients completed the Short Form-36 (SF-36) and the 49-item Oral Health Impact Profile (OHIP), as self-administered questionnaires, before prosthodontic treatment and 1 month after treatment was finished. Differences in SF-36 and OHIP scores between baseline and follow up were tested for statistical significance using paired t-tests. Effect sizes (Cohen's d) were calculated. Health-related quality of life improved during prosthodontic treatment, indicated by a slight, but statistically significant, increase in the SF-36 physical component (difference: 1.0 points), whereas perceived mental health did not change substantially (difference: −0.5 points). Improvement in OHRQoL (difference in OHIP sum score: −6.7 points) was statistically significant. Although the OHIP effect size (of 0.2) was considered as small, according to guidelines, it was greater than for the SF-36 component scores (physical: 0.1; mental: 0.1). Sensitivity to change in quality of life measures was greater for OHRQoL than for HRQoL, limiting the usefulness of HRQoL as an outcome measure in dentistry.

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 24563919

VL - 122

SP - 70

EP - 77

JO - EUR J ORAL SCI

JF - EUR J ORAL SCI

SN - 0909-8836

IS - 1

ER -