A SURVEY OF ORAL HEALTH IN A POPULATION OF ADULTS WITH DEVELOPMENTAL-DISABILITIES - COMPARISON WITH A NATIONAL ORAL HEALTH SURVEY OF THE GENERAL-POPULATION

Citation
A. Scott et al., A SURVEY OF ORAL HEALTH IN A POPULATION OF ADULTS WITH DEVELOPMENTAL-DISABILITIES - COMPARISON WITH A NATIONAL ORAL HEALTH SURVEY OF THE GENERAL-POPULATION, Australian dental journal, 43(4), 1998, pp. 257-261
Citations number
18
Categorie Soggetti
Dentistry,Oral Surgery & Medicine
Journal title
ISSN journal
00450421
Volume
43
Issue
4
Year of publication
1998
Pages
257 - 261
Database
ISI
SICI code
0045-0421(1998)43:4<257:ASOOHI>2.0.ZU;2-3
Abstract
During 1991, an oral health assessment of 101 adults with developmenta l disabilities aged from 21 to 53 years was undertaken as part of a br oader health survey which also included medical, psychological and nut ritional assessments. The study group consisted of a random sample of adults chosen from the developmentally disabled population known to be living in the lower North Shore area of Sydney. This paper describes the results of the oral health assessment and compares them with an or al health survey of the Australian population done in 1987/88. Forty-s ix per cent of the study group were males (mean age 33.5 years) and 54 per cent were females (mean age 33.0 years). Compared with similar ag e subgroups in the Australian population, the following factors were m ore frequently reported in the developmentally disabled group: a denta l visit in the last 12 months (65 per cent vs 50 per cent; Odds Ratio (OR) 1.9:95 per cent Confidence Interval (CI): 1.3-2.8); use of public rather than private dental services (42 per cent vs 6 per cent; OR 11 .3:95% CI 7.5-16.9); oral mucosal pathology requiring treatment (15 pe r cent vs 2 per cent; OR 8.5:95% CI 5.2-13.8); severe periodontal dise ase (16 per cent vs 3 per cent; OR 6.9:95% CI 4.2-11.4); and moderate to severe malocclusion (26 per cent vs 11 per cent; OR 2.1:95% CI 1.3- 3.5). Fifty-eight per cent of subjects felt they needed no dental trea tment but on examination of the oral mucosa, periodontal tissues and t eeth, over 90 per cent were found to require some sort of dental treat ment.