Responsiveness to change of The Malay-Ecohis following treatment of early childhood caries under general anaesthesia / Nor Azlina Hashim

Background: Oral health-related quality of life (OHRQoL) measures should be tested for their sensitivity and responsiveness to changes in OHRQoL if they are to be used as outcome measures in clinical interventions. Objectives: (a) To evaluate the sensitivity of the Malay version of Early Childhood O...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Nor Azlina, Hashim
Format: Thesis
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/7903/1/All.pdf
http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/7903/9/nor_azlina.pdf
http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/7903/
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id my.um.stud.7903
record_format eprints
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Student Repository
url_provider http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/
topic RK Dentistry
spellingShingle RK Dentistry
Nor Azlina, Hashim
Responsiveness to change of The Malay-Ecohis following treatment of early childhood caries under general anaesthesia / Nor Azlina Hashim
description Background: Oral health-related quality of life (OHRQoL) measures should be tested for their sensitivity and responsiveness to changes in OHRQoL if they are to be used as outcome measures in clinical interventions. Objectives: (a) To evaluate the sensitivity of the Malay version of Early Childhood Oral Health Impact Scale (Malay-ECOHIS) to dental treatment of early childhood caries (ECC) under General Anesthesia (GA) by: (i) assessing changes in the distribution of Malay-ECOHIS scores before and after treatment under GA, (ii) assessing the association between Malay-ECOHIS change scores and severity of decayed teeth (dt) categorized by the median and percentile score, (iii) assessing the correlation between Malay-ECOHIS change scores and the number of decayed teeth, and (iv) assessing the correlation between Malay-ECOHIS change scores and number of extracted teeth; (b) evaluate the responsiveness of the Malay-ECOHIS to dental treatment of ECC under GA by comparing whether the observed changes in Malay-ECOHIS scores and effect size (ES) took the form of a gradient across the global transition judgement; and (c) establish the Minimal Important Difference (MID) of the Malay-ECOHIS. Methods: A consecutive sample of parents of 158 preschool children (aged 6 and younger) with ECC attending five public hospitals in Selangor for dental treatment under GA was recruited over an 8-month period. Parents self-completed the Malay-ECOHIS prior to and 4 weeks following their child’s dental treatment. In addition, parents answered a global health transition judgement concerning the change in their child’s overall oral health condition compared to before treatment. Data were analyzed using independent and paired samples T-test, ANOVA, Pearson correlation, and standardised scores. Results: Overall, 138 children completed the study with response rate of 87.3%. The final sample comprised parents of 76 male (55.1%) and 62 female (44.9%) preschool children with mean age of 4.54 years (SD=1.01). The ECOHIS mean score after treatment was significantly lower compared to before treatment. This significant reduction in mean score existed for total Malay-ECOHIS, Child Impact Section (CIS), Family Impact Section (FIS), and all the sub-domains, respectively (P<0.001). The magnitude of change (ES) of total Malay-ECOHIS following treatment was +1.0 and among domains ranged from +0.4 to +1.9. There was no significant association between Malay-ECOHIS change scores and severity of decayed teeth (dt) categorized by median or percentile score. However, there was a weak, positive correlation between number of decayed teeth (dt) and Malay-ECOHIS (r=0.165, p=0.05) and CIS change scores (r=0.175, p<0.05), respectively. No significant correlation was found between Malay-ECOHIS change scores and number of extracted teeth. Based on global health transition judgement, 62.3% of parents reported their child’s oral condition “a little improved” while 37.7% reported “much improved” following treatment under GA with ECOHIS mean change score of 6.7 (ES=+1.1) and 9.6 (ES=+1.2), respectively. There was an observed gradient in the changes of Malay-ECOHIS scores and effect sizes in relation to global health transition judgement of oral change following treatment, supporting the responsiveness of the measure. The Malay-ECOHIS MID was found to be 7-point change with large ES of +1.0. Conclusion: The Malay-ECOHIS is empirically proven to be sensitive and responsiveness to dental treatment of ECC under GA.
format Thesis
author Nor Azlina, Hashim
author_facet Nor Azlina, Hashim
author_sort Nor Azlina, Hashim
title Responsiveness to change of The Malay-Ecohis following treatment of early childhood caries under general anaesthesia / Nor Azlina Hashim
title_short Responsiveness to change of The Malay-Ecohis following treatment of early childhood caries under general anaesthesia / Nor Azlina Hashim
title_full Responsiveness to change of The Malay-Ecohis following treatment of early childhood caries under general anaesthesia / Nor Azlina Hashim
title_fullStr Responsiveness to change of The Malay-Ecohis following treatment of early childhood caries under general anaesthesia / Nor Azlina Hashim
title_full_unstemmed Responsiveness to change of The Malay-Ecohis following treatment of early childhood caries under general anaesthesia / Nor Azlina Hashim
title_sort responsiveness to change of the malay-ecohis following treatment of early childhood caries under general anaesthesia / nor azlina hashim
publishDate 2017
url http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/7903/1/All.pdf
http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/7903/9/nor_azlina.pdf
http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/7903/
_version_ 1738506078044291072
spelling my.um.stud.79032020-06-30T00:10:43Z Responsiveness to change of The Malay-Ecohis following treatment of early childhood caries under general anaesthesia / Nor Azlina Hashim Nor Azlina, Hashim RK Dentistry Background: Oral health-related quality of life (OHRQoL) measures should be tested for their sensitivity and responsiveness to changes in OHRQoL if they are to be used as outcome measures in clinical interventions. Objectives: (a) To evaluate the sensitivity of the Malay version of Early Childhood Oral Health Impact Scale (Malay-ECOHIS) to dental treatment of early childhood caries (ECC) under General Anesthesia (GA) by: (i) assessing changes in the distribution of Malay-ECOHIS scores before and after treatment under GA, (ii) assessing the association between Malay-ECOHIS change scores and severity of decayed teeth (dt) categorized by the median and percentile score, (iii) assessing the correlation between Malay-ECOHIS change scores and the number of decayed teeth, and (iv) assessing the correlation between Malay-ECOHIS change scores and number of extracted teeth; (b) evaluate the responsiveness of the Malay-ECOHIS to dental treatment of ECC under GA by comparing whether the observed changes in Malay-ECOHIS scores and effect size (ES) took the form of a gradient across the global transition judgement; and (c) establish the Minimal Important Difference (MID) of the Malay-ECOHIS. Methods: A consecutive sample of parents of 158 preschool children (aged 6 and younger) with ECC attending five public hospitals in Selangor for dental treatment under GA was recruited over an 8-month period. Parents self-completed the Malay-ECOHIS prior to and 4 weeks following their child’s dental treatment. In addition, parents answered a global health transition judgement concerning the change in their child’s overall oral health condition compared to before treatment. Data were analyzed using independent and paired samples T-test, ANOVA, Pearson correlation, and standardised scores. Results: Overall, 138 children completed the study with response rate of 87.3%. The final sample comprised parents of 76 male (55.1%) and 62 female (44.9%) preschool children with mean age of 4.54 years (SD=1.01). The ECOHIS mean score after treatment was significantly lower compared to before treatment. This significant reduction in mean score existed for total Malay-ECOHIS, Child Impact Section (CIS), Family Impact Section (FIS), and all the sub-domains, respectively (P<0.001). The magnitude of change (ES) of total Malay-ECOHIS following treatment was +1.0 and among domains ranged from +0.4 to +1.9. There was no significant association between Malay-ECOHIS change scores and severity of decayed teeth (dt) categorized by median or percentile score. However, there was a weak, positive correlation between number of decayed teeth (dt) and Malay-ECOHIS (r=0.165, p=0.05) and CIS change scores (r=0.175, p<0.05), respectively. No significant correlation was found between Malay-ECOHIS change scores and number of extracted teeth. Based on global health transition judgement, 62.3% of parents reported their child’s oral condition “a little improved” while 37.7% reported “much improved” following treatment under GA with ECOHIS mean change score of 6.7 (ES=+1.1) and 9.6 (ES=+1.2), respectively. There was an observed gradient in the changes of Malay-ECOHIS scores and effect sizes in relation to global health transition judgement of oral change following treatment, supporting the responsiveness of the measure. The Malay-ECOHIS MID was found to be 7-point change with large ES of +1.0. Conclusion: The Malay-ECOHIS is empirically proven to be sensitive and responsiveness to dental treatment of ECC under GA. 2017-09 Thesis NonPeerReviewed application/pdf http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/7903/1/All.pdf application/pdf http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/7903/9/nor_azlina.pdf Nor Azlina, Hashim (2017) Responsiveness to change of The Malay-Ecohis following treatment of early childhood caries under general anaesthesia / Nor Azlina Hashim. PhD thesis, University of Malaya. http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/7903/
score 13.214268