Helping the Family manage dental care Flashcards

1
Q

What is treatment alliance?

A
  • Based on trust between child, accompanying adult and dental team
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2
Q

When can dental anxiety occur?

A
  • Childhood or adolescence
  • Children with high caries more likely to have dental anxiety
  • Most obvious under age of 4
  • Can arise from parent being dentally anxious and passing on to child
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3
Q

What is the Modified Child Dental Anxiety Scale (MCDAS)?

A
  • Self completion measure for children aged 8 and older
  • 8 questions about specific dental procedure
  • Aim is to reduce score over time
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4
Q

How would you approach a dentally anxious child in your surgery?

A
  • Consider child’s anxiety level when planning care and whether use of specific behaviour management strategies is indicated
  • Consider anxiety questionnaire
  • Some children respond to coaxing, but if child becomes distressed cease treatment immediately
  • Consider treatment compromise in positive way i.e. fluoride varnish rather than no treatment
  • Arrange later appointment to complete planned treatment
  • Don’t force treatment on child who is unwilling or unable to cope with it
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5
Q

What are some behavioural management strategies that facilitate provision of preventive care and treatment?

A
  • Communication
  • Enhancing control
  • Tell, show, do
  • Behaviour shaping and reinforcement
  • Structured time
  • Distraction, relaxation
  • Systemic desensitisation
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6
Q

What does communication consist of?

A

Non-verbal communication - which conveys emotion and attitude
Words - Which convey information
Tone - Which conveys emotion and attitude

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7
Q

If a parent is anxious what can you do to help them and the child at their appointment?

A
  • Discuss how to prepare child for visit and negotiating ground rules for how to behave and communicate
  • Discuss whether another adult familiar to child should attend visits
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8
Q

How does enhancing control help a dentally anxious child?

A
  • Giving child a role in saying stop or go enhances their feelings of control
  • Should be used all the time
  • Gives child a degree of control , rehearse the signal
  • Stop immediately when signal is given otherwise mistrust phobia can develop
  • Useful for children of school age or older, younger children may not understand
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9
Q

How is Tell, show, do useful for a child with dental anxiety?

A
  • Tell phase using appropriate language that avoids technical and emotive terms
  • Show them before actually performing the action
  • Helps with subsequent visits
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10
Q

Outline using the tell, show, do strategy how a dentally anxious 5year old will accept treatment involving highspeed for first time?

A
  • Gain rapport
  • Give control
  • Tell child what you would like to do and show handpiece
  • Show high-volume aspirator
  • Ask to try and if say yes then get nurse to pop it in their mouth with tip
  • Check child okay and tell them they’ve done well
  • Tell them putting handpiece in mouth using language they understand, switch it on and count to 4 then remove
  • Don’t touch tooth and they can practise staying big and wide whilst you wash tooth
  • Next touch tooth for 4 and see how they manage
  • Consider this technique for each new action
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11
Q

What are the most powerful reinforces of good behaviour?

A
  • Facial expression
  • Positive voice modulation
  • Verbal praise
  • Approval by parent/carer with hug
  • Stickers or badges
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12
Q

How is structured time useful for dentally anxious children?

A
  • Break down time into units the child can understand and a child is less likely to get upset
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13
Q

How is distraction useful for dental procedures for children?

A
  • Shift patients attention to another situation, from unpleasant to other action
  • Cartoons
  • Pulling lip as LA given
  • Raise legs during radiographs or impressions
  • Clinician talking can distract also
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14
Q

How is relaxation strategy used for dental anxiety?

A
  • Ask child to place hand on tummy and breath slowly to fill tummies then slowly out
  • Praise them
  • Do this three times any time they feel tense or worried
  • Useful for children of school age and older
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15
Q

Outline the method for Systemic Desensitisation for dental anxiety

A
  • Discuss with child how to recognise signs of stress and anxiety that they may be experiencing (e.g. hyperventilation, tension)
  • Teach child how to manage their anxiety, principally with breathing and other methods like guided imagery
  • Teach child how to describe their anxiety, use scale 1-10
  • Break procedure down into stages and describe them
  • Give control and try first stage and go through relaxation technique
  • If child continues to demonstrate significant anxiety, consider referral to specialist
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