Determinants of Self-Assessed Gingival Health Among Adolescents

Authors

  • Pekka Kallio Department of Dental Public Health, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland
  • Heikki Murtomaa Department of Dental Public Health, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3109/00016359709115401

Keywords:

Dental public health, diagnosis, monitoring, self-care

Abstract

Kallio P, Murtomaa H. Determinants of self-assessed gingival health among adolescents.

The purpose of the present cross-sectional study was to assess the extent of agreement between clinical and self-assessed gingival health and to investigate possible factors associated with the amount of self-assessed gingival bleeding. A study group comprising students enrolled in grade 7 or 8 in Helsinki, Finland (n = 172), performed a self-assessment based on two tests: the amount of bleeding after toothbrushing and after interproximal tooth cleaning with toothpicks. Clinical examinations based on bleeding on probing (BOP%) were carried out by four local community dentists. The highest observed kappa value was 0.43 for the agreement between BOP% and self-assessment when tested with different cut-off points of diagnosis. Multivariate analysis showed that clinical status and toothbrushing frequency were statistically significantly associated with self-assessed gingival bleeding in both tests. Socioeconomic status and locus of control orientation were also statistically significant factors in the toothpick test. In conclusion, the validity of self-assessment of bleeding was sufficient for monitoring adolescents' gingival health in groups. Self-assessed bleeding was explained by the same factors that were associated with clinical gingival health status.

 

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Published

1997-01-01