Children’s Oral Health Status and Their Level of Dental Fear

نویسندگان

  • Mohammed Qays Mahmoud Fahmi Assistant professor, Department of Preventive, Orthodontic, Pedodontic dentistry, College of Dentistry, Musransiriyah university, Iraq
  • Lubna Abdulelah Abdulrahman Almallah
  • Wurood Khairallah Al-Lehaibi
  • Basma Abdulbari Aziz

DOI::

https://doi.org/10.5195/d3000.2026.1331

کلمات کلیدی:

Child, Dental Caries, Dental Fear, Pediatric Dentistry

چکیده

Children's dental fear can be effectively treated to prevent it from developing into adulthood. This cross-sectional study's objective was to appraise the children's dental fear and ascertain how it relates to dental caries. An analytical cross-sectional design was utilized in the investigation. A random sampling of 120 kids between the ages of 4 – 14 years comprising of 66 (55%) of them were boys and 54 (45%) were girls. The Children’s Fear Survey Schedule–Dental Subscale (CFSS‑DS) was applied  to measure dental fear in children. Caries experience was measured as decayed, missed, and filled permanent and primary teeth (DMFT/dmft) according to the World Health Organization (WHO) criteria. Dental fear was present in 28.3% of girls ≥ 38, whereas (21.6%) of the boys had dental fear ≥ 38, Girls experienced significantly more dental fear than males (P < 0.05). In our investigation, average of CFSS-DS score was (37.20±7.12), the most frightening factor was “having the dentist give you an injection” (3.83±0.5), followed by “the dentist drilling” (3.57±0.57), “injection” (3.39±0.1) and “chocking” (3.58±0.51) and dentist (2.63±0.8). Girls experienced significantly more dental fear than boys (P < 0.05. The study demonstrated the dental anxiety prevalence in children between the ages of 4 -14 and showed a statistically significant relationship between children's age, gender, dental caries and the degree of dental anxiety.

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چاپ شده

2026-06-02

شماره

نوع مقاله

Development of Craniofacial Structures