Fear and Anxiety Pathways Associated with Root Canal Treatments Amongst a Population of East Asian Origin

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Author(s)
Chen, Wei Ju
Carter, Ava
Boschen, Mark
Love, Robert M
George, Roy
Year published
2020
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Objective: This study aimed to identify and compare the pathways of endodontic fear and anxiety amongst East Asian origin patients attending Griffith University’s Dental Clinic, Gold Coast, Australia.
Methods: East Asian patients who attended the Griffith University dental clinics were included in this study. The “My Endodontic Fear” survey was used. The pathways involved in self-perception of dental fear and anxiety were assessed through 5 different questions. Chi-square test was for statistical analysis and the level of significance was set at P<0.05.
Results: One hundred and forty six participants (n=146) (ages 18-62 ...
View more >Objective: This study aimed to identify and compare the pathways of endodontic fear and anxiety amongst East Asian origin patients attending Griffith University’s Dental Clinic, Gold Coast, Australia. Methods: East Asian patients who attended the Griffith University dental clinics were included in this study. The “My Endodontic Fear” survey was used. The pathways involved in self-perception of dental fear and anxiety were assessed through 5 different questions. Chi-square test was for statistical analysis and the level of significance was set at P<0.05. Results: One hundred and forty six participants (n=146) (ages 18-62 years) of East Asian descent met criteria to participate. 58.2% were females, and 41.8% males. The ethnicities were split into Chinese origin and non-Chinese origin (Korean, Phillipino, Japanese, Vietnamese). Results indicate multiple pathways affect met the criteria the origin of fear, regardless of ethnicity. The Cognitive Conditioning pathway was the primary pathway selected by the Chinese and non-Chinese sub groups (51.4%, 43.6%) followed by the Informative (38.3%, 38.5%), then Vicarious (27.1%, 33.3%) and Parental (18.7%, 33.3%) pathways respectively.The Verbal Threat pathway was the least selected pathway for both groups, however the non- Chinese groups selected this pathway significantly more often than the Chinese group (P<0.001). Conclusion: This study demonstrates that the Cognitive Conditioning pathway was the primary fear and anxiety pathway utilized by both East Asian sub-groups. Understanding how patients develop fear and anxiety can help treating dentists discuss triggering factors for patients and alleviate undue anxiety prior to treatment.
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View more >Objective: This study aimed to identify and compare the pathways of endodontic fear and anxiety amongst East Asian origin patients attending Griffith University’s Dental Clinic, Gold Coast, Australia. Methods: East Asian patients who attended the Griffith University dental clinics were included in this study. The “My Endodontic Fear” survey was used. The pathways involved in self-perception of dental fear and anxiety were assessed through 5 different questions. Chi-square test was for statistical analysis and the level of significance was set at P<0.05. Results: One hundred and forty six participants (n=146) (ages 18-62 years) of East Asian descent met criteria to participate. 58.2% were females, and 41.8% males. The ethnicities were split into Chinese origin and non-Chinese origin (Korean, Phillipino, Japanese, Vietnamese). Results indicate multiple pathways affect met the criteria the origin of fear, regardless of ethnicity. The Cognitive Conditioning pathway was the primary pathway selected by the Chinese and non-Chinese sub groups (51.4%, 43.6%) followed by the Informative (38.3%, 38.5%), then Vicarious (27.1%, 33.3%) and Parental (18.7%, 33.3%) pathways respectively.The Verbal Threat pathway was the least selected pathway for both groups, however the non- Chinese groups selected this pathway significantly more often than the Chinese group (P<0.001). Conclusion: This study demonstrates that the Cognitive Conditioning pathway was the primary fear and anxiety pathway utilized by both East Asian sub-groups. Understanding how patients develop fear and anxiety can help treating dentists discuss triggering factors for patients and alleviate undue anxiety prior to treatment.
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Journal Title
European Endodontic Journal
Volume
5
Issue
1
Copyright Statement
© The Author(s) 2019. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License, which permits unrestricted, non-commercial use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, providing that the work is properly cited.
Subject
Dentistry
Psychology
Science & Technology
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Dentistry, Oral Surgery & Medicine
Asians
dental fear