Oral Disease, Impairment, and Illness: Congruence Between Clinical and Questionnaire Findings

Authors

  • Lennart Unell Community Dental Health Unit, Örebro County Council, Örebro, Sweden; Center for Oral Health Sciences, Lund University, Malmö, Sweden; Centre for Public Health Sciences, Östergötland County Council, Linköping, Sweden; Community Dental Health Unit, Värmland County Council, Karlstad, Sweden; Department of Cariology, Faculty of Odontology, Göteborg University, Göteborg, Sweden
  • Björn Söderfeldt Community Dental Health Unit, Örebro County Council, Örebro, Sweden; Center for Oral Health Sciences, Lund University, Malmö, Sweden; Centre for Public Health Sciences, Östergötland County Council, Linköping, Sweden; Community Dental Health Unit, Värmland County Council, Karlstad, Sweden; Department of Cariology, Faculty of Odontology, Göteborg University, Göteborg, Sweden
  • Arne Halling Community Dental Health Unit, Örebro County Council, Örebro, Sweden; Center for Oral Health Sciences, Lund University, Malmö, Sweden; Centre for Public Health Sciences, Östergötland County Council, Linköping, Sweden; Community Dental Health Unit, Värmland County Council, Karlstad, Sweden; Department of Cariology, Faculty of Odontology, Göteborg University, Göteborg, Sweden
  • Jörgen Paulander Community Dental Health Unit, Örebro County Council, Örebro, Sweden; Center for Oral Health Sciences, Lund University, Malmö, Sweden; Centre for Public Health Sciences, Östergötland County Council, Linköping, Sweden; Community Dental Health Unit, Värmland County Council, Karlstad, Sweden; Department of Cariology, Faculty of Odontology, Göteborg University, Göteborg, Sweden
  • Dowen Birkhed Community Dental Health Unit, Örebro County Council, Örebro, Sweden; Center for Oral Health Sciences, Lund University, Malmö, Sweden; Centre for Public Health Sciences, Östergötland County Council, Linköping, Sweden; Community Dental Health Unit, Värmland County Council, Karlstad, Sweden; Department of Cariology, Faculty of Odontology, Göteborg University, Göteborg, Sweden

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3109/00016359709115404

Keywords:

Epidemiology, regression, survey, validation

Abstract

Unell L, Söderfeldt B, Halling A, Paulander J, Birkhed D. Oral disease, impairment, and illness: congruence between clinical and questionnaire findings.

In 1992 a questionnaire was sent to 50-year-olds in two Swedish counties. These self-report data were compared with clinical observations with regard to number of teeth, removable dentures, caries, and periodontitis. Complete information from both data sources was obtained for 1041 persons. The relevant questionnaire item explained 71% of the missing tooth variance. An agreement of 0.91 (Cohen's K) was obtained for removable dentures. A question about problem in opening the mouth differentiated clearly with regard to measured mouth opening ability. Toothache and tooth sensitivity were reported with 95% probability when having 22 decayed teeth and with 46% when there were no decayed teeth (58% correctly predicted). Two teeth with pockets ≥6 mm gave 5% probability and 22 such teeth gave 39% probability of reporting migration of front teeth. The main conclusion from this study is that there is good correspondence between subjective self-reports and clinical findings, especially for those conditions that are relatively easy for the patient to observe, such as the number of teeth and the presence of dentures. Thus questionnaire data can be used for information and screening about some well-defined oral conditions.

 

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Published

1997-01-01