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Psychosocial factors, dentist-patient relationships, and oral health-related quality of life: a structural equation modelling

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Authors

Song, Youngha; Luzzi, Liana; Brennan, David

Issue Date
2023-12-04
Publisher
BMC
Citation
Health and Quality of Life Outcomes, Vol.21(1):130
Keywords
Oral healthPsychosocialDentist-patient relationsHealth-related quality of lifeSouth Australia
Abstract
Background
Psychosocial factors and dentist-patient relationships (DPR) have been suggested to be associated with oral health outcomes. This study aimed to test a conceptual model which hypothesised relationships among psychosocial factors, DPR variables, and oral health-related quality of life (OHRQoL) in the distal-to-proximal framework.

Methods
A total of 12,245 adults aged 18 years or over living in South Australia were randomly sampled for the study. Data were collected from self-complete questionnaires in 2015–2016. The outcome variable of Oral Health Impact Profile was used to measure OHRQoL. Psychosocial domain consisted of psychological well-being, social support, and health self-efficacy. DPR domain included trust in dentists, satisfaction with dental care, and dental fear. The hypothesised model was tested using the two-step approach in structural equation modelling.

Results
Data were analysed from 3767 respondents after the screening/preparing process (adjusted valid response rate 37.4%). In the first step of the analysis, confirmatory factor analyses produced acceptable measurement models for each of the six latent variables (GFI = 0.95, CFI = 0.98, RMSEA = 0.04). The final structural model indicated that better well-being, higher self-efficacy, and more satisfaction were associated with lower oral health impact (β = − 0.12, − 0.07, − 0.14, respectively) whereas fear was positively associated (β = 0.19). Among intermediates, support was positively associated with satisfaction within a small effect size (β = 0.06) as compared to self-efficacy with trust (β = 0.22). The invariance of the final model was also confirmed on participants SES and dental service characteristics except the variable of last dental visit.

Conclusions
Psychosocial factors and DPR variables were associated with oral health impact in both direct and indirect paths. The framework of distal-to-proximal actions is empirically supported from psychosocial factors via DPR variables to OHRQoL.
ISSN
1477-7525
Language
English
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/198701
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12955-023-02214-x
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