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J Am Dent Assoc, Vol 130, No 5, 715-723.
© 1999 American Dental Association

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TRENDS

JADA Continuing Education

DETERMINING DENTAL CHECKUP FREQUENCY



MARILYN W. WOOLFOLK, D.D.S., M.P.H., W. PAUL LANG, D.D.S., M.P.H., WENCHE S. BORGNAKKE, D.D.S., M.P.H., PH.D., GEORGE W. TAYLOR, D.M.D., DR.P.H., DAVID L. RONIS, PH.D. and LINDA V. NYQUIST, PH.D.

Background. The authors assessed the dental checkup frequency of adults living in the Detroit tricounty area and identified demographic, access and subjective factors associated with visits to a dentist made not because of a dental problem.

Methods. Data are from a 1994 probability-based sample of adults who were interviewed and received an in-home oral examination. The authors used the variables of age, sex, education level, income level, dental insurance status, usual place for care, objective measures of oral health, and subjective assessments of health, pain and dental anxiety to predict the frequency of dental checkups.

Results. The authors found that differences in dental checkup behavior were related to demographics, access to dental care, subjective ratings of oral and general health and other self-assessments, and clinical parameters of oral health. In multiple logistic regression analysis considering all variables simultaneously, sex, income, having a usual place for care and level of dental care anxiety were found to be associated with having dental checkups. The authors determined the statistical significance level at P < .05.

Conclusions. A total of 69.7 percent of the study population reported having had a dental checkup at least once a year in the past five years. The authors found that four factors associated with infrequent dental checkups: being male, having lower income levels, not having a usual place for care and being anxious about receiving dental care.

Practice Implications. Dental health professionals should consider the correlates of dental checkup frequency identified in this study and the usefulness of proposed strategies to increase and sustain regular preventive visitation patterns in their own patient populations.




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