Inability to work after surgical removal of mandibular third molars

Authors

  • Trond Inge Berge Department of Oral Surgery and Oral Medicine, University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3109/00016359709091944

Keywords:

Analgesics, impacted teeth, oral surgery, sick leave

Abstract

Inability to work after mandibular third-molar surgery was studied in 201 patients operated on in a specialist clinic. Mean indicated inability to work was 1.07 days; 95% confidence intend, 0.91-1.23 days; range, 0-6 days. Eighty-six (43%) patients did not indicate any reduction in working ability. Duration of operation more than 14 min, heavy smoking (> 19 cigarettes/day), and female sex were associated with prolonged inability to work Self-administered analgesic consumption and pain scores over the first postoperative week showed positive correlations with inability to work r = 0.44 and 0.41, respectively. Other indicators of the normal postoperative reaction were to a lesser extent associated with reduced ability to work Total sick-leave cost in Norway associated with surgical third-molar removals, adjusted for age-related income, employment rate, treatment rate, and provider of treatment, was 46.4 million NOK per year.

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Published

1997-01-01