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Published in: BMC Oral Health 1/2020

Open Access 01-12-2020 | Caries | Research article

Dental professionals’ experiences of managing children with carious lesions in their primary teeth – a qualitative study within the FiCTION randomised controlled trial

Authors: Zoe Marshman, Jennifer E. Kettle, Richard D. Holmes, Kathryn B. Cunningham, Ruth Freeman, Barry J. Gibson, Elaine McColl, Anne Maguire, Gail V. A. Douglas, Janet E. Clarkson, Nicola P. T. Innes

Published in: BMC Oral Health | Issue 1/2020

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Abstract

Background

The lack of evidence for the effective management of carious lesions in children’s primary teeth has caused uncertainty for the dental profession and patients. Possible approaches include conventional and biological management alongside best practice prevention, and best practice prevention alone. The FiCTION trial assessed the effectiveness of these options, and included a qualitative study exploring dental professionals’ (DPs) experiences of delivering the different treatment arms. This paper reports on how DPs managed children with carious lesions within FiCTION and how this related to their everyday experiences of doing dentistry.

Methods

Overall, 31 DPs from FiCTION-trained dental surgeries in four regions of the UK participated in semi-structured interviews about their experiences of the three treatment arms (conventional management of carious lesions and prevention (C + P), biological management of carious lesions and prevention (B + P) or prevention alone (PA)). A theoretical framework, drawing on social practice theory (SPT), was developed for analysis.

Results

Participants discussed perceived effectiveness of, and familiarity with, the three techniques. The C + P arm was familiar, but some participants questioned the effectiveness of conventional restorations. Attitudes towards the B + P arm varied in terms of familiarity, but once DPs were introduced to the techniques, this was seen as effective. While prevention was familiar, PA was described as ineffective. DPs manage children with carious lesions day-to-day, drawing on previous experience and knowledge of the child to provide what they view as the most appropriate treatment in the best interests of each child. Randomisation undermined these normal choices. Several DPs reported deviating from the trial arms in order to treat a patient in a particular way. Participants valued evidence-based dentistry, and expect to use the results of FiCTION to inform future practice. They anticipate continuing to use the full range of treatment options, and to personally select appropriate strategies for individual children.

Conclusions

RCTs take place in the context of day-to-day practices of doing dentistry. DPs employ experiential and interpersonal knowledge to act in the best interests of their patients. Randomisation within a clinical trial can present a source of tension for DPs, which has implications for assuring individual equipoise in future trials.
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Footnotes
1
The dentinal lesion was either cavitated or non-cavitated and was diagnosed by visual dental examination alone or with bitewing radiographs.
 
2
For example, the entity of drilling and filling a tooth comprises materials such as the filling material, the drill and the carious lesion in a tooth; competences refer to understanding why fillings work, as well as knowing how to drill away carious tooth tissue and apply the filling material. ‘Drilling and filling’ involves the interaction of these particular materials and the competences used and various meanings, such as ‘restoring the tooth’, as well as ‘effectively treating carious tissue.’
 
3
DPs actively drilling and filling teeth (performing the practice) sustain the links between elements within the entity (a particular set of materials, competences and meanings). Thus as a practice, ‘drilling and filling’ is recognisable to successive generations of DPs and patients, both as an idea that can be talked about and taught in dental schools, and an activity that DPs perform in their day-to-day work of ‘doing dentistry.’
 
4
Drilling and filling as a practice has changed over time, for example as composite emerged as an alternative filling material to amalgam, and air turbine drills require different skills to older models. New elements have the potential to become linked to existing meanings (such as ‘restoring the tooth’ and ‘effectively treating carious lesions’), and disconnect from older ones (e.g. drilling as ‘laborious’).
 
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Metadata
Title
Dental professionals’ experiences of managing children with carious lesions in their primary teeth – a qualitative study within the FiCTION randomised controlled trial
Authors
Zoe Marshman
Jennifer E. Kettle
Richard D. Holmes
Kathryn B. Cunningham
Ruth Freeman
Barry J. Gibson
Elaine McColl
Anne Maguire
Gail V. A. Douglas
Janet E. Clarkson
Nicola P. T. Innes
Publication date
01-12-2020
Publisher
BioMed Central
Keyword
Caries
Published in
BMC Oral Health / Issue 1/2020
Electronic ISSN: 1472-6831
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12903-020-1051-7

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