Factors shaping demand for prostethic dentistry treatment with special focus on implant dentistry

Aim: The main aim of this thesis was to investigate how attitudesinfluence the latent and manifest need, desire, demand, and utilizationfor dental implant treatment, considering the gatekeeping processbetween need and demand, and between demand and utilization ofdental treatment.Material and Methods...

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1. Verfasser: Narby, Birger
Format: Dissertation
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Aim: The main aim of this thesis was to investigate how attitudesinfluence the latent and manifest need, desire, demand, and utilizationfor dental implant treatment, considering the gatekeeping processbetween need and demand, and between demand and utilization ofdental treatment.Material and Methods: A conceptual analysis of the need anddemand concept from the literature was a first step in the study. Asecond step was to examine changes in attitudes toward desire forimplant treatment over time, also in relation to dental status, in apopulation of middle aged and older individuals in Sweden based ontwo questionnaire studies, one in 1989 and the other in 1999 amongthe same 3000 participants. The individuals who responded bothin 1989 and 1999 constituted a panel of 56% of the 1989 surveysample. Logistic regression models were done with desire of implanttreatment as dependent variable. In paper V, a qualitative studyusing grounded theory was done on the treated patients’ subjectiveperspective on receiving a fixed implant-supported denture.Results: An emancipatory perspective with the patient-dentistdialogue was regarded as central for an optimal treatment result inthe prosthetic treatment decision-making process. A main findingwas that need is established only in a communicative dialoguewith mutual respect between the profession and the patient. Thestudy implied that the gatekeeping concept relates to a complexprocess rendering great differences between demand and actualutilization. The main result from the questionnaires was the huge11increase in interest for implant-treatment from 1989 to 1999. In1999 almost all (94%) of the study population expressed desirefor implant treatment; as many as 92 % percent of those who didnot express a desire for implants in 1989 had changed their mind10 years later. The regression analysis showed that older people,non-city residents, and those with one or several missing and unreplacedteeth, changed desire for implant treatment between thestudy years. Effects of age, residence, and better dental statusdisappeared during the ten year study period. Those edentulousand those with removable dentures expressed less desire than thosewith all teeth remaining, or only one or a few teeth missing, in1989. High income significantly increased the probability to desireimplant treatment for the study panel at both study occasions. Thequalitative study, using the method for grounded theory, gave ascore category and main finding the importanc