Publication | Closed Access
Factors Influencing Dental Decision Making
73
Citations
18
References
1988
Year
Behavioral Decision MakingPreventive DentistryDecision AnalysisDecision ScienceSurgeryIndividual Decision MakingMedical Decision MakingPrimary CareMail QuestionnaireBiasManagementDecision TheoryHealth Services ResearchBehavioral SciencesWashington StateOutcomes ResearchRoot Canal TreatmentCaries RatePatient SafetyMedicine
In clinical decision making, dentists routinely choose between alternative treatments such as crown vs amalgam/composite buildup, root canal vs extraction, fixed bridge vs removable partial denture, and prophylaxis vs subgingival curettage or periodontal scaling. A number of technical and patient factors can influence dentists' choice of treatment in these situations; however, little is known about their relative importance. To address this issue, a list of technical (e.g., periodontal status and caries rate) and patient (e.g., cost and patient preference) factors possibly influencing choice of treatment was developed for each pair of services. Responding to a mail questionnaire, 156 general dentists in Washington State listed the top three factors influencing their choice of service in each pair. Results revealed that dentists took different factors into account in choosing among alternative treatments. Technical factors dominated over patient concerns; only about 33 percent of the dentists considered patient factors important in choosing alternative therapies. The latter group was less preventively oriented, were solo practitioners, worked longer hours, and had lower prices. Results suggest patients may have little influence on prescriptions of therapy among experienced general dentists.
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