The short-term effect of prosthodontic treatment on self-reported oral health status: the use of a single-item questionnaire.

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The short-term effect of prosthodontic treatment on self-reported oral health status: the use of a single-item questionnaire. / John, Mike T; Reißmann, Daniel; Allen, Finbarr; Biffar, Reiner.

In: INT J PROSTHODONT, Vol. 20, No. 5, 5, 2007, p. 507-513.

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@article{916846dbc04d49669e69339492a0c28e,
title = "The short-term effect of prosthodontic treatment on self-reported oral health status: the use of a single-item questionnaire.",
abstract = "PURPOSE: To describe self-reported oral health status before and after treatment in patients treated with fixed, removable, and complete dentures. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Subjects were a convenience sample of 119 prosthodontic patients (patients treated with fixed prostheses (n=61), removable dentures (n=48), and complete dentures (n=10); mean age: 57.3 +/- 15.6 years; 47% women). Self-reported oral health status before and 1 month after treatment was measured with a 5-point question (responses ranging from {"}excellent{"} to {"}poor{"}) frequently used in epidemiologic studies and health services research. Pretreatment and posttreatment self-ratings of oral health were compared with the findings from a national general population sample (n=2016; age: 16 to 79 years) categorized by their denture status. Change of oral health status was evaluated using Wilcoxon matched pairs signed ranks test. RESULTS: {"}Excellent{"} or {"}very good{"} ratings were observed for 4% of the patients at baseline and for 16% of the patients at follow-up, which was identical to the prevalence of these ratings in the general population for subjects with removable dentures (16%) and better than for complete dentures wearers (13%). The change from pretreatment to posttreatment self-reported oral health status was statistically significant (P <.001). Substantial differences in change patterns among groupings of prosthodontic therapies (fixed, removable, or complete dentures) were not observed. CONCLUSIONS: Self-reported oral health status improved considerably comparing pretreatment and posttreatment status. Single questions describing the overall situation of perceived oral health or its changes may provide simple and easy-to-interpret information about the impact of prosthodontic treatment.",
author = "John, {Mike T} and Daniel Rei{\ss}mann and Finbarr Allen and Reiner Biffar",
year = "2007",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "20",
pages = "507--513",
journal = "INT J PROSTHODONT",
issn = "0893-2174",
publisher = "Quintessence Publishing Company",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The short-term effect of prosthodontic treatment on self-reported oral health status: the use of a single-item questionnaire.

AU - John, Mike T

AU - Reißmann, Daniel

AU - Allen, Finbarr

AU - Biffar, Reiner

PY - 2007

Y1 - 2007

N2 - PURPOSE: To describe self-reported oral health status before and after treatment in patients treated with fixed, removable, and complete dentures. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Subjects were a convenience sample of 119 prosthodontic patients (patients treated with fixed prostheses (n=61), removable dentures (n=48), and complete dentures (n=10); mean age: 57.3 +/- 15.6 years; 47% women). Self-reported oral health status before and 1 month after treatment was measured with a 5-point question (responses ranging from "excellent" to "poor") frequently used in epidemiologic studies and health services research. Pretreatment and posttreatment self-ratings of oral health were compared with the findings from a national general population sample (n=2016; age: 16 to 79 years) categorized by their denture status. Change of oral health status was evaluated using Wilcoxon matched pairs signed ranks test. RESULTS: "Excellent" or "very good" ratings were observed for 4% of the patients at baseline and for 16% of the patients at follow-up, which was identical to the prevalence of these ratings in the general population for subjects with removable dentures (16%) and better than for complete dentures wearers (13%). The change from pretreatment to posttreatment self-reported oral health status was statistically significant (P <.001). Substantial differences in change patterns among groupings of prosthodontic therapies (fixed, removable, or complete dentures) were not observed. CONCLUSIONS: Self-reported oral health status improved considerably comparing pretreatment and posttreatment status. Single questions describing the overall situation of perceived oral health or its changes may provide simple and easy-to-interpret information about the impact of prosthodontic treatment.

AB - PURPOSE: To describe self-reported oral health status before and after treatment in patients treated with fixed, removable, and complete dentures. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Subjects were a convenience sample of 119 prosthodontic patients (patients treated with fixed prostheses (n=61), removable dentures (n=48), and complete dentures (n=10); mean age: 57.3 +/- 15.6 years; 47% women). Self-reported oral health status before and 1 month after treatment was measured with a 5-point question (responses ranging from "excellent" to "poor") frequently used in epidemiologic studies and health services research. Pretreatment and posttreatment self-ratings of oral health were compared with the findings from a national general population sample (n=2016; age: 16 to 79 years) categorized by their denture status. Change of oral health status was evaluated using Wilcoxon matched pairs signed ranks test. RESULTS: "Excellent" or "very good" ratings were observed for 4% of the patients at baseline and for 16% of the patients at follow-up, which was identical to the prevalence of these ratings in the general population for subjects with removable dentures (16%) and better than for complete dentures wearers (13%). The change from pretreatment to posttreatment self-reported oral health status was statistically significant (P <.001). Substantial differences in change patterns among groupings of prosthodontic therapies (fixed, removable, or complete dentures) were not observed. CONCLUSIONS: Self-reported oral health status improved considerably comparing pretreatment and posttreatment status. Single questions describing the overall situation of perceived oral health or its changes may provide simple and easy-to-interpret information about the impact of prosthodontic treatment.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 20

SP - 507

EP - 513

JO - INT J PROSTHODONT

JF - INT J PROSTHODONT

SN - 0893-2174

IS - 5

M1 - 5

ER -