Follow us:
Log in | Register | Go to french website FR website


X




Forgot your password?

Tropical Dental Journal - 1st Pan African international dental journal


Dictionnaire Internet Africain des Médicaments (DIAM)



encart_diam_strides

Consultez les mentions légales (RCP) des médicaments disponibles dans votre pays


Medical library

Browse all APIDPM's publications and enjoy the subscription offers in APIDPM Online store

Do you want to subscribe to Tropical Dental Journal ? CConsult articles? Visit APIDPM Online store - Read more


SPONSORING
APIDPM supports African medical congresses

You organize a medical congress in Africa?
APIDPM stands by your side to promote it. As of now, ask for your « Partnership » file.

Read more


TEAM OF READERS
Expertise to share?

Do you have expertise in a specific field and would like to contribute your experience and help our authors publish better articles?

Contact Nathalie!


Archives / Articles consultation


Published in English in Tropical Dental Journal Volume 42 - December 2019 pages 23-33

Perceived dental fear in children from Rabat (Morocco) and Bordeaux (France)Perceived dental fear in children from Rabat (Morocco) and Bordeaux (France) est évalué 1 étoiles par les abonnés Tropical Dental Journal Online

Article Open access

Authors : E. Moulis, C. Inquimbert, P. Tramini, J. Nancy - France


Résumé

Introduction : La peur du dentiste ou anxiété dentaire est de par le monde une des principales raisons de l’évitement et de la renonciation aux soins dentaires. La santé bucco-dentaire ainsi que la peur du dentiste dépendent de différences culturelles entre les populations. Le but de cette étude est d’évaluer et de comparer l’anxiété dentaire dans deux villes francophones : Rabat (capitale du Maroc) et Bordeaux (grande ville française).
Matériel et méthode : La version française du questionnaire ‘Children’s Fear Survey Schedule-Dental Subscale’ (CFSS-DS) a été adressée à 743 écoliers âgés de 8 à 11 ans dans ces deux villes.
Résultats : Le score CFSS-DS moyen est de 27.54 (ET : 10.50, mi-max: 15-68, IC: 26.78-28.31). Il est significativement plus élevé à Rabat (30.38 ± 10.6) qu’à Bordeaux (24.51 ± 9.53, p = 0.0001). Il est également supérieur chez les filles (29.03 vs 26.11, p = 0.0002) et chez les plus jeunes enfants mais seulement à Rabat (33.47 vs 27.83, p = 0.01). La prévalence globale de l’anxiété dentaire est de 18.13% (IC: 15.40%-21.13%). Elle est significativement supérieure chez les enfants de Rabat (18.88%) comparée à Bordeaux (15.34%, p = 0.003), et également supérieure chez les filles (21.57%) comparée aux garçons (14.82%, p = 0.02). Les items ‘avoir peur de s’étouffer’ et ‘avoir peur de la piqûre’ sont les sources principales d’anxiété dentaire chez les enfants des 2 villes, alors que les enfants de Bordeaux ressentaient une peur particulière de ‘devoir à aller à l’hôpital’.
Conclusion : Cette étude montre que des variables sociodémographiques comme la ville de résidence, le genre et l’âge des enfants pouvaient être en relation avec l’anxiété dentaire. Ceci souligne l’aspect multidimensionnel de l’anxiété dentaire, comprenant des influences environnementales et culturelles, qui pourraient être prises en compte dans des programmes scolaires de prévention bucco-dentaires adaptés en fonction de la psychologie des enfants.

Abstract
Perceived dental fear in children from Rabat (Morocco) and Bordeaux (France)

Introduction: Dental fear is one of the most significant reasons for dental care avoidance or refusal over the world. So oral health and dental fear may be related to cultural differences between populations. The aim of this study was to assess and compare dental fear levels in two French speaking cities: Rabat (capital of Morocco) and Bordeaux (big French town).
Material and method: The French version of the Children’s Fear Survey Schedule-Dental Subscale (CFSS-DS) was administered at school to 743 children aged 8-11 years in the two cities.
Results: The mean CFSS-DS score was 27.54 (SD: 10.50, range: 15-68, CI: 26.78-28.31). It was significantly greater in Rabat (30.38 ± 10.6) than in Bordeaux (24.51 ± 9.53, p = 0.0001), in girls than in boys (29.03 vs 26.11, p = 0.0002) and younger children from Rabat perceived significantly more dental fear (33.47 vs 27.83, p = 0.01). The global childhood fear prevalence was 18.13% (CI: 15.40%-21.13%). This prevalence was significantly higher in Rabat (18.88%) than in Bordeaux (15.34%, p = 0.003) and significantly higher in girls (21.57%) than in boys (14.82%, p = 0.02). “Choking” and “injections” were the main source of dental fear in Rabat and Bordeaux, while “having to go to the hospital” showed a high score in girls from Bordeaux.
Conclusion: This study showed that town, gender and age had a significant influence on CFSS-DS score and dental fear prevalence. It also underlined that dental fear is multidimensional, with cultural and environmental influences, which could be managed in tailored prevention programs implemented at younger ages at school.

icone adobe Read ( PDF )

This article is currently rated Perceived dental fear in children from Rabat (Morocco) and Bordeaux (France) is rated 1 stars (1.0 stars) by the subscribers of Tropical Dental Journal Online.
It has been viewed 1910 times, downloaded 40 times and rated 1 times.  No comment has yet been added about this article

Back

N.B.: to add a comment, type your text in the form available under the full article.

X


Already registered?


Not yet registered?


Fast buy?





Dictionnaire Internet Africain des Médicaments (DIAM)


CONTACT US

Address

  • Espace Santé 3
    521, avenue de Rome
    83500 La Seyne sur mer - France

Phone

  • +33 4 94 63 24 99

Contact us


APIDPM

Who are we?

Use rights


Publisher:

Valid XHTML 1.0 Strict CSS Valide !