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Family Cohesion Is Associated with the Self-Perceived Need for Dental Treatment among Adolescents
Author(s) -
Isolda Mirelle de Lima Ferreira Prata,
Ana Flávia GranvilleGarcia,
Érick Tássio Barbosa Neves,
Larissa Chaves Morais de Lima,
Laio da Costa Dutra,
Matheus França Perazzo,
Fernanda Morais Ferreira,
Saul Martins Paiva
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
biomed research international
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.772
H-Index - 126
eISSN - 2314-6141
pISSN - 2314-6133
DOI - 10.1155/2021/4504030
Subject(s) - logistic regression , cross sectional study , medicine , oral health , family medicine , clinical psychology , psychology , pathology
This study explored the association between family cohesion and self-perceived need for dental treatment among adolescents. A school-based representative cross-sectional study was conducted with 746 students aged 15 to 19 randomly selected from schools in Campina Grande, Brazil. Parents/guardians provided information on sociodemographic data, and students completed questionnaires about the self-perceived need for dental treatment, dental pain, and family cohesion and adaptability (FACES III). Two dentists were trained (kappa >0.80) to diagnosis dental caries using the Nyvad criteria and assess adolescents' level of functional oral health literacy (BREALD-30). Descriptive analysis was performed, followed by nonadjusted and adjusted robust binary logistic regression for complex samples ( α = 5%). The prevalence of self-perceived need for dental treatment was 88.6%. The presence of dental caries (OR = 2.10; IC 95%: 1.22–3.61), tooth loss (OR = 15.81; IC 95%: 2.14–116.56), dental pain in the last six months (OR = 1.87; IC 95%: 1.06–3.31), and enmeshed family cohesion type (OR = 10.23; IC 95%: 3.96–26.4) remained associated with the self-perceived need for dental treatment in the final model. In conclusion, dental caries, dental pain, tooth loss, and family cohesion influenced the self-perceived need for dental treatment in adolescents.

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