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Behaviour support in dentistry: A Delphi study to agree terminology in behaviour management

Mac Giolla Phadraig, Caoimhin; Healy, Olive; Fisal, Aisyah Ahmad; Yarascavitch, Carilynne; van Harten, Maria; Nunn, June; Newton, Tim; Sturmey, Peter; Asimakopoulou, Koula; Daly, Blánaid; Hosey, Marie Therese; Kammer, Pedro Vitali; Dougall, Alison; Geddis‐Regan, Andrew; Pradhan, Archana; Setiawan, Arlette Suzy; Kerr, Bryan; Friedman, Clive S.; Cornelius, Bryant W.; Stirling, Christopher; Hamzah, Siti Zaleha; Decloux, Derek; Molina, Gustavo; Klingberg, Gunilla; Ayup, Hani; Buchanan, Heather; Anjou, Helena; Maura, Isabel; Bernal Fernandez, Ilidia Reyes; Limeres Posse, Jacobo; Hare, Jennifer; Francis, Jessica; Norderyd, Johanna; Rohani, Maryani Mohamed; Prabhu, Neeta; Ashley, Paul F.; Marques, Paula Faria; Chopra, Shalini; Pani, Sharat Chandra; Krämer, Susanne

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Authors

Caoimhin Mac Giolla Phadraig

Olive Healy

Aisyah Ahmad Fisal

Carilynne Yarascavitch

Maria van Harten

June Nunn

Tim Newton

Peter Sturmey

Koula Asimakopoulou

Blánaid Daly

Marie Therese Hosey

Pedro Vitali Kammer

Alison Dougall

Andrew Geddis‐Regan

Archana Pradhan

Arlette Suzy Setiawan

Bryan Kerr

Clive S. Friedman

Bryant W. Cornelius

Christopher Stirling

Siti Zaleha Hamzah

Derek Decloux

Gustavo Molina

Gunilla Klingberg

Hani Ayup

Helena Anjou

Isabel Maura

Ilidia Reyes Bernal Fernandez

Jacobo Limeres Posse

Jennifer Hare

Jessica Francis

Johanna Norderyd

Maryani Mohamed Rohani

Neeta Prabhu

Paul F. Ashley

Paula Faria Marques

Shalini Chopra

Sharat Chandra Pani

Susanne Krämer



Abstract

Objectives: Dental behaviour support (DBS) describes all specific techniques practiced to support patients in their experience of professional oral healthcare. DBS is roughly synonymous with behaviour management, which is an outdated concept. There is no agreed terminology to specify the techniques used to support patients who receive dental care. This lack of specificity may lead to imprecision in describing, understanding, teaching, evaluating and implementing behaviour support techniques in dentistry. Therefore, this e‐Delphi study aimed to develop a list of agreed labels and descriptions of DBS techniques used in dentistry and sort them according to underlying principles of behaviour. Methods: Following a registered protocol, a modified e‐Delphi study was applied over two rounds with a final consensus meeting. The threshold of consensus was set a priori at 75%. Agreed techniques were then categorized by four coders, according to behavioural learning theory, to sort techniques according to their mechanism of action. Results: The panel (n = 35) agreed on 42 DBS techniques from a total of 63 candidate labels and descriptions. Complete agreement was achieved regarding all labels and descriptions, while agreement was not achieved regarding distinctiveness for 17 techniques. In exploring underlying principles of learning, it became clear that multiple and differing principles may apply depending on the specific context and procedure in which the technique may be applied. Discussion: Experts agreed on what each DBS technique is, what label to use, and their description, but were less likely to agree on what distinguishes one technique from another. All techniques were describable but not comprehensively categorizable according to principles of learning. While objective consistency was not attained, greater clarity and consistency now exists. The resulting list of agreed terminology marks a significant foundation for future efforts towards understanding DBS techniques in research, education and clinical care.

Citation

Mac Giolla Phadraig, C., Healy, O., Fisal, A. A., Yarascavitch, C., van Harten, M., Nunn, J., Newton, T., Sturmey, P., Asimakopoulou, K., Daly, B., Hosey, M. T., Kammer, P. V., Dougall, A., Geddis‐Regan, A., Pradhan, A., Setiawan, A. S., Kerr, B., Friedman, C. S., Cornelius, B. W., Stirling, C., …Krämer, S. (2024). Behaviour support in dentistry: A Delphi study to agree terminology in behaviour management. Community Dentistry and Oral Epidemiology, 52(4), 550-571. https://doi.org/10.1111/cdoe.12953

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Feb 15, 2024
Online Publication Date Mar 22, 2024
Publication Date 2024-08
Deposit Date May 7, 2024
Publicly Available Date May 7, 2024
Journal Community Dentistry and Oral Epidemiology
Print ISSN 0301-5661
Electronic ISSN 1600-0528
Publisher Wiley
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 52
Issue 4
Pages 550-571
DOI https://doi.org/10.1111/cdoe.12953
Keywords anaesthesia, behaviour sciences, behaviour management, taxonomy, dentistry, sedation, anxiety management, Delphi technique
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/33012841
Publisher URL https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/cdoe.12953

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