B. Corkey et R. Freeman, PREDICTORS OF DENTAL ANXIETY IN 6-YEAR-OLD CHILDREN - FINDINGS FROM APILOT-STUDY, Journal of dentistry for children, 61(4), 1994, pp. 267-271
The pilot study reported here is based on interviews with sixty, 6-yea
r-old children randomly selected from a school population (and their m
others), to investigate predictors of dental anxiety in this age-group
. The results demonstrated that child dental anxiety status was signif
icantly related to dental factors, psychological developmental factors
, and maternal factors. When all sixty data sets were entered into a r
egression analysis, 92 percent of the variance of the relationship of
child dental anxiety could be predicted by eight factors in the three
categories (F = 7.39, P < 0.001). The study demonstrated that the chil
d's ability to cope with dental treatment (as reflected in reported di
sruptive behaviors) was based upon his/her degree of psychological dev
elopment together with the mother's fear of dental treatment. It seems
that an interaction exists, in which the role of the mother plays a c
entral part influencing on the one hand the child's degree of psycholo
gical development and on the other the child's ability to cope with de
ntal treatment. The findings from this preliminary study suggest that
factors such as these should be considered by dentists when assessing
their child patients, in order to identify and help the anxious child
cope with dental care.