Influence of Child’s Temperament on Behaviour Management Problems in the Dental Office: A Literature Review
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Search Strategy
2.2. Eligibility Criteria
2.3. Data Collected
3. Results
3.1. Literature Search
3.2. Descriptive Analysis
3.2.1. The Behaviour Style Questionnaire (BSQ) Scale
- Activity: the level of motor activity and the amount of time the child is active.
- Rhythmicity/regularity: patterns of eating, sleeping and other bodily functions.
- Approach and the withdrawal: ease of approaching people and situations.
- Adaptability: the way the child responds to changes in his/her environment.
- Response: the energy levels and intensity of the child’s response.
- Disposition: predominant quality of mood.
- Sensitivity: the threshold for stimuli.
- Distractibility: how easily the child can be distracted from what he is doing.
- Attention span/persistence: the span of time for which the child will pay attention to one thing when left to his/her own devices and their persistence with an activity. [22]
3.2.2. The Emotionality–Activity–Sociability (EAS) Scale
- Emotionality, distress: in the face of a threatening event, variations on this dimension can range from a stoic lack of reaction to distress beyond the child’s emotional control.
- Activity: the pace and energy of the child.
- Sociability: the desire to interact with the social environment.
- Impulsiveness is replaced by Shyness due to its lower-than-expected level of heritability. Shyness refers to inhibiting behaviours in the presence of strangers and a tendency to shy away from social interactions.
3.3. Child Behaviour in a Dental Environment
3.3.1. During the First Session with the Dentist
3.3.2. During Invasive Procedures
3.3.3. Patients Referred for Sedations
4. Discussion
- The approach, the withdrawal and the inability to adapt the BSQ/CBQ correspond to the sociability of EAS.
- The intensity of the reactions corresponds to the emotionality.
- The level of motor activity, as well as distractibility, corresponds to hyperactivity.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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# | Search Term |
---|---|
1 | temperament [All Fields] AND dent [All Fields] |
2 | temperament [MeSH Terms] AND child [All Fields] AND dent [All Fields] |
3 | child’s temperament [All Fields] AND dent [All Fields] |
4 | toddler [All Fields] AND temperament [All Fields] AND dent [All Fields] |
5 | toddler [All Fields] AND temperament [All Fields] AND dent [All Fields] |
6 | dental behavior [All Fields] AND temperament [All Fields] |
7 | dental behavior [All Fields] AND temperament [All Fields] AND child [All Fields] |
8 | behavior [All Fields] AND child [All Fields] AND temperament [All Fields] |
Author and Year of Publication | Age (Years) | N | Temperament Scale Used | Type of Procedure | Sedation Used | Behaviour Rating Scale | Results: Temperament Statistically Associated with DBMP |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Lochary 1993 [10] | 18–36 months | 29 | TTS | Invasive: restoration under local anaesthesia | 2 mg/kg oral Hydroxyzine + 2 mg/kg submucosal Meperidine | Ohio State university Behavior Rating Scale (4 items) | Approach/withdrawal (p = 0.0015) Adaptability (p = 0.009) |
Radis 1994 [11] | 3–5 | 50 | BSQ | Non-invasive: initial dental examination + X-rays + prophylaxis | None | Ohio State University Behavior Rating Scale | Low Approach/withdrawal (p = 0.0023) Low adaptability: (p = 0.0022) Intensity/crying: (p = 0.0351) Activity: (p = 0.0157) |
Arnrup 2002 [12] | 4–13 | 203 | EASI + Rutter scale | Assessment of factors that influence children cooperation. No information found about the disruptive behaviour nor the dental procedure leading to this disruptive behaviour. | Emotionality (p < 0.001) Impulsivity (p < 0.001) | ||
Jensen 2002 [13] | 17–51 months (4,5 years) | 50 | EAS + Shyness | Invasive: avulsion under local anaesthesia | 0.3 mg/kg intra-rectal Midazolam | Level of sedation (Wilton) + Child’s acceptance of procedure according to Host | Shyness (p = 0.05) Emotionality (p = 0.01) Mood changing |
Isik 2010 [14] | 4–8 | 60 | STSC (30 items) + CPRS-R (80 items) | Invasive: treatment under local anaesthesia | 0.75 mg/kg oral Midazolam + N2O/O2 40/60% | Houpt Sedation Rating Scale (HSRS) | Inflexibility (p = 0.033) |
Aminabadi 2011 [15] | 1–7 | 196 | ECBQ for 18–36 months and CBQ for 3–7 years old | Invasive: restoration under local anaesthesia | None | Frankl | Anger, irritability, fear, reaction, reactivity, shyness. (correlation coefficient = 0.33 p < 0.05) |
Lane 2015 [16] | 36–95 months (7,9 years) | 61 | CBQ SF | Invasive: restoration under local anaesthesia | 0.3 mg/kg Midazolam + 1 mg/kg hydroxyzine + 1.5 mg/kg Meperidine (50 min latency) + MEOPA | Houpt Sedation Rating Scale (HSRS) | Impulsivity (p = 0.04) |
Pai 2015 [17] | 7–11 | 165 | Standardized multi-factor questionnaire including personality | -Non-invasive -Moderately-invasive -Highly invasive (with local anaesthesia) | None | Venham | Sociability Interaction with siblings (p = 0.00001) Interaction with other children (p = 0.00001) Conduct towards parents (p = 0.00001) School performance (p = 0.0004) |
Nelson 2017 [18] | 3–5,5 5,5–8 | 48 | CBQ-SF: 3 groups with 15 subgroups, 94 items | Invasive: restoration + tooth extraction under local anaesthesia | N2O/O2 50% | Frankl | Effortful control (p = 0.001): Attention control (p = 0.002), Inhibitory control (p = 0.001) Negativity Affectivity (p = 0.006): frustration (p = 0.006) sadness (p = 0.011) soothability (p = 0.006) Extraversion/surgency: activity (p = 0.004), impulsivity (p = 0.018) |
Tsoi 2018 [19] | 4–12 | 113 | EAS | No information | No sedation reported | Frankl | Emotionality (r = 0.497 p < 0.001) Activity (r = 0.196 p < 0.03) Shyness (r = 0.281 p < 0.003) |
Jain 2019 [20] | 3–5 | 100 | EAS | Non-invasive: initial dental examination + X-rays + prophylaxis | None | Frankl (score of 1–4) | Emotionality a(Spearman’s correlation coefficient rs = 0.28) (p = 0.046) Shyness associated with dental anxiety (rs = 0.28) (p = 0.897) Activity (p = 0.012) |
Janeshin 2021 [21] | 3–7 | 215 | CBQ | Invasive: dental pulp treatment with local anaesthesia | None | Frankl | Mean scores of fear (p = 0.004) and perceptual sensitivity (p = 0.001) were higher in completely negative behaviour than other temperament traits |
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Do, N.M.; Clauss, F.; Schmitt, M.; Manière, M.-C. Influence of Child’s Temperament on Behaviour Management Problems in the Dental Office: A Literature Review. Children 2023, 10, 90. https://doi.org/10.3390/children10010090
Do NM, Clauss F, Schmitt M, Manière M-C. Influence of Child’s Temperament on Behaviour Management Problems in the Dental Office: A Literature Review. Children. 2023; 10(1):90. https://doi.org/10.3390/children10010090
Chicago/Turabian StyleDo, Nhat Minh, François Clauss, Margot Schmitt, and Marie-Cécile Manière. 2023. "Influence of Child’s Temperament on Behaviour Management Problems in the Dental Office: A Literature Review" Children 10, no. 1: 90. https://doi.org/10.3390/children10010090
APA StyleDo, N. M., Clauss, F., Schmitt, M., & Manière, M.-C. (2023). Influence of Child’s Temperament on Behaviour Management Problems in the Dental Office: A Literature Review. Children, 10(1), 90. https://doi.org/10.3390/children10010090