68 research outputs found

    Avoidance of dental appointment due to cost and consequences for oral health-related quality of life: 25-yr follow-up of Swedish adults

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    We explored how socio-demographic and personal characteristics contribute to avoidance of dental appointment due to cost over time from age 55 (in 1997) to 75 (in 2017) and assessed the implications for oral health-related quality of life. In 1992, 6346 residents born in 1942 consented to participate in a prospective questionnaire survey, and 3060 (48.2%) of them completed postal follow-ups every fifth year until 2017. Oral health-related quality of life was assessed using the Oral Impact on Daily Performance inventory. The frequency of avoidance of dental appointment due to cost declined from 7.0% (in 1997) to 5.4% (in 2017), whereas the frequency of oral impacts declined from 26.0% in 2007 to 24.0% in 2017. Generalized Estimating Equation models revealed that avoidance of dental appointments due to cost was more likely reported in 1997 (OR: 1.5: 1.2–1.8) than in 2017, more likely in low educated people, and less likely in those using private dental care services. Avoidance of dental appointment due to cost was associated with impaired oral health-related quality of life. Social inequalities in avoidance of dental appointment due to cost and oral impacts did not vary across time but persisted into older ages despite the dental health care reforms that had been implemented.publishedVersio

    Validity and reliability of the Oral Impacts on Daily Performance (OIDP) frequency scale: a cross-sectional study of adolescents in Uganda

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    BACKGROUND: Assessing oral health related quality of life impact of mouth in adolescents is a relatively ignored area in dental research. This study aimed to examine reliability and validity of an abbreviated version of the oral impact of daily performance (OIDP) questionnaire and to analyse the interrelationship among OIDP scores, socio-demographic characteristics and oral health status in Uganda. METHOD: 1146 adolescents (mean age 15.8, response rate 87%) attending secondary schools in Kampala (urban) and Lira (rural) completed a survey instrument designed to measure subjective oral health indicators including the eight-item OIDP frequency scores. A clinical examination was conducted among 372 students (mean age 16.3, response rate 72%) and caries was assessed following the World Health Organisation criteria (1997). RESULTS: 62% of the students experienced at least one oral impact during the 6 months preceding the survey. Cronbach's alpha for the OIDP frequency items was 0.91 and the corrected item-total correlation ranged from 0.62 to 0.75. Discriminant and construct validity were demonstrated in that the OIDP scores varied systematically in the expected direction with missing teeth and self-report indicators of oral health status, respectively. Socio-demographics and dental attendance did not predict OIDP through interaction with clinical indicators but varied systematically and independently with OIDP frequency scores in the multivariate analysis. CONCLUSION: the OIDP frequency score have acceptable psychometric properties in the context of an oral health survey among Ugandan adolescents. Some evidence of the importance of social and personal characteristics in shaping adolescents' responses to oral disorders was provided

    Biodegradation kinetics of 4-fluorocinnamic acid by a consortium of Arthrobacter and Ralstonia strains

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    Arthrobacter sp. strain G1 is able to grow on 4-fluorocinnamic acid (4-FCA) as sole carbon source. The organism converts 4-FCA into 4-fluorobenzoic acid (4-FBA) and utilizes the two-carbon side-chain for growth with some formation of 4-fluoroacetophenone as a dead-end side product. We also have isolated Ralstonia sp. strain H1, an organism that degrades 4-FBA. A consortium of strains G1 and H1 degraded 4-FCA with Monod kinetics during growth in batch and continuous cultures. Specific growth rates of strain G1 and specific degradation rates of 4-FCA were observed to follow substrate inhibition kinetics, which could be modeled using the kinetic models of Haldane–Andrew and Luong–Levenspiel. The mixed culture showed complete mineralization of 4-FCA with quantitative release of fluoride, both in batch and continuous cultures. Steady-state chemostat cultures that were exposed to shock loadings of substrate responded with rapid degradation and returned to steady-state in 10–15 h, indicating that the mixed culture provided a robust system for continuous 4-FCA degradation

    Reaching out to the Asian community

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    SIGLELD:83/16061(Reaching) / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreGBUnited Kingdo

    The Carers Impact experiment

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    SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:96/33091 / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreGBUnited Kingdo

    Self help groups and professionals An annotated bibliography of literature published in the United Kingdom between 1982-1991

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    SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:99/12773 / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreGBUnited Kingdo
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