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Parents' Ability to Assess Dental Fear in their Six- to 10-year-old Children. | LitMetric

Parents' Ability to Assess Dental Fear in their Six- to 10-year-old Children.

Pediatr Dent

Biostatistics and Informatics, School of Public Health, University of Colorado, Aurora, Colo., USA.

Published: January 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to explore how well parents can judge their children's dental anxiety and how these assessments relate to the kids' behavior during dental visits.
  • A total of 184 child/parent pairs participated by completing a dental anxiety questionnaire before treatment, with a single provider evaluating the children's behavior and assigning scores.
  • Results showed that while parents reported slightly higher anxiety levels than their children, their assessments were often inaccurate; children's self-reported anxiety was a better indicator of actual behavior during treatment.

Article Abstract

Purpose: To investigate parents' ability to assess dental anxiety of their six- to 10-year-old children and to determine how parents' and children's fear assessments correlate with patient behavior during dental treatment.

Methods: From a continuous convenience sample, 184 child/parent dyads were recruited to complete the Children's Fear Survey Schedule-Dental Subscale (CFSS-DS) questionnaire prior to dental treatment. One provider treated all children, assessed their behavior, and assigned a Frankl score rating to them. Parent/child anxiety scores were compared to each other and to the behavior children presented during dental treatment.

Results: The mean dental anxiety score reported by the children was 30.30; the score reported by their parents was 2.94 points higher (P=.0016). There was poor consistency within parent/child pairs when precisely assessing dental anxiety. Parental assessments of their children's dental anxiety were a poor to fair predictor for observed behavior, whereas the children's self-assessments were fair to good. Child age was not associated with ability to assess anxiety. Parents of children with low anxiety overestimated their children's anxiety, whereas parents of children with high anxiety underestimated their children's anxiety.

Conclusions: Parents and children showed moderate agreement assessing dental anxiety measured by the CFSS-DS. The child's score is preferable for predicting behavior.

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