AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study investigates how dentists' beliefs and attitudes might hinder their ability to provide dental care to young children, using the Barriers to Childhood Caries Treatment (BaCCT) Questionnaire as a measurement tool.
  • - A total of 2,333 dentists from 14 countries participated, revealing four potential barriers to care, with key issues being young children's coping abilities and dentists' personal stress and time constraints.
  • - The research concluded that while the BaCCT Questionnaire is a valid tool, the ability of dentists to provide care is influenced by healthcare systems and these effects differ by country, indicating a need for further research in this area.

Article Abstract

Objective: To explore whether dentists' beliefs and attitudes to providing preventive and restorative dental care for young children can form a barrier to the provision of care.

Basic Research Design: The Barriers to Childhood Caries Treatment (BaCCT) Questionnaire, a standardised international measure was developed and applied.

Participants: Through a research consortium, each site was asked to recruit 100 dentists. The sample participating was not intended to be nationally representative. Dentists were mainly randomly selected and contacted by mail with one or more mailings depending on site.

Results: 2,333 dentists in 14 countries and 17 sites participated. Factor analysis identified four factors as potential barriers. Two factors were found to be barriers in many sites. First, in most countries, dentists agreed that young children's coping skills limit their ability to accept dental care. Secondly, dentists with negative personal feelings, for example, that providing care can be stressful and troublesome and that they feel time constrained. Differences in dentists' beliefs can be partly explained by their work profile, with those treating children often, and those working under systems where they feel they can provide quality care being least likely to identify barriers to providing care for children.

Conclusions: The BaCCT Questionnaire was determined to be a valid psychometric measure. Separately, it was found that health systems do impact on dentists' ability to deliver preventive and restorative care for children but that these effects vary across countries and further work is needed to determine how best these should be examined.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

childhood caries
8
dentists' beliefs
8
preventive restorative
8
dental care
8
bacct questionnaire
8
providing care
8
dentists
6
care
6
barriers
5
barriers treatment
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!