Details

The Fearful Dental Patient


The Fearful Dental Patient

A Guide to Understanding and Managing
1. Aufl.

von: Arthur A. Weiner

64,99 €

Verlag: Wiley-Blackwell
Format: EPUB
Veröffentl.: 15.09.2011
ISBN/EAN: 9781119949831
Sprache: englisch
Anzahl Seiten: 320

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Beschreibungen

<b><i>The Fearful Dental Patient: A Guide to Understanding and Managing</i></b> helps dental professionals understand the basics of fear, anxiety and phobias and the role these emotions play in creating negative behavior within the dental environment. The text contains a variety of modalities that help identify dental fear and phobia, as well as chair-side techniques and practical advice aimed at improving patient cooperation and ensuring treatment compliance. <p>Chapter topics include the basic origins of patient fear and anxiety, how to indentify dental anxiety and varied approaches to managing fearful patients of any age.  Approaches discussed employ behavioral, pharmacological, sedation and even hypnotic techniques, specifying combinations where required. Chapters also include coverage of a wide range of patients, including those with psychiatric comorbidities and special healthcare needs. The entire dental team will greatly benefit from the proven methods and practical guidance presented to better understand and treat fearful dental patients.</p>
<b>Foreword xi</b> <p><b>Preface xv</b></p> <p><b>Acknowledgments xvii</b></p> <p><b>About the Author xix</b></p> <p><b>Contributor List xxi</b></p> <p><b>1 The basic principles of fear, anxiety, and phobia: past and present 3<br /> </b><i>Arthur A. Weiner</i></p> <p>Introduction 3</p> <p>Major etiological models to explain anxiety 6</p> <p>Behavioral indicators of anxiety 7</p> <p>Nature of dental anxiety 9</p> <p>Echelons of expression 9</p> <p>Timing of dental anxiety 11</p> <p>Severity 13</p> <p>Differentiating psychological (exogenous) anxiety from medical (endogenous) anxiety 13</p> <p>Natural history of endogenous anxiety 14</p> <p>Phobias 20</p> <p>Causes of phobias 21</p> <p>Summary 24</p> <p>Note 25</p> <p>References 25</p> <p><b>2 Determinants associated with creating fearful dental patients 29<br /> </b><i>Arthur A. Weiner</i></p> <p>Introduction 29</p> <p>Prevalence of dental fear 30</p> <p>Direct conditioning 31</p> <p>The approach–avoidance conflict theory 32</p> <p>Exploring the literature cataloging the common fi ndings of each of the determinants of dental fear 33</p> <p>Patient control 38</p> <p>Gender, age, socioeconomic, life status determinants of dental fear 39</p> <p>Practitioners' determinants of dental fear 45</p> <p>Oral health, quality of life, and the impact of dental anxiety 52</p> <p>Summary 54</p> <p>References 54</p> <p><b>3 Factors affecting the psychological collection and identification of the fearful dental patient 61<br /> </b><i>Arthur A. Weiner</i></p> <p>Introduction 61</p> <p>Prerequisite components for enhanced communication skills 62</p> <p>Establishing a positive patient–dentist relationship 66</p> <p>Two-way communication 68</p> <p>Accommodating patient–dentist priority differences 69</p> <p>The initial patient–dentist consultation 70</p> <p>Practitioner's verbal inquiry and collection of past and present history 74</p> <p>Summary 85</p> <p>References 86</p> <p><b>4 Chairside management of the fearful dental patient: behavioral modalities and methods 89<br /> </b><i>Arthur A. Weiner</i></p> <p>Introduction 90</p> <p>The concept of the dental practitioner as a "facilitator of change" 90</p> <p>Step-by-step chairside model for fear amelioration in the frightened dental patient 99</p> <p>Chairside management resulting from patient's consultation and determinants of fears elicited 114</p> <p>Doctor–patient relationship and its role in reducing anxiety and gaining treatment acceptance (this section by Samuel Shames) 116</p> <p>Alternative behavior modification and treatment modalities 119</p> <p>References 124</p> <p><b>5 The pharmacological basis of pain and anxiety control 127<br /> </b><i>Morton Rosenberg and Michael Thompson</i></p> <p>Introduction 127</p> <p>Local anesthesia 128</p> <p>Summary 135</p> <p>References 135</p> <p><b>6 Hypnosis in dentistry 139<br /> </b><i>Michael A. Gow</i></p> <p>Introduction 139</p> <p>What is hypnosis? 140</p> <p>The hypnosis session 145</p> <p>Hypnosis in dentistry—"hypnodontics" 154</p> <p>"Informal" hypnotic techniques in day-to-day dental practice 161</p> <p>An anchoring technique for child dental patients—"the high five anchor" 164</p> <p>Conclusions 165</p> <p>Suggested hypnosis societies, training pathways, and contacts for dentists 166</p> <p>References 166</p> <p><b>7 Management of complicated, high-risk patients with psychiatric comorbidities 173<br /> </b><i>Kelly M. Wawrzyniak and Ronald J. Kulich</i></p> <p>Introduction 173</p> <p>Overview: behavioral science and the complicated patient 173</p> <p>Posttraumatic stress disorder 174</p> <p>Major depressive disorder and related mood disorders 178</p> <p>Chronic pain disorder and related somatoform disorders 180</p> <p>Schizophrenia 184</p> <p>Personality disorders 186</p> <p>Substance use disorders 189</p> <p>Eating disorders 191</p> <p>General management recommendations 191</p> <p>References 193</p> <p><b>8 Understanding and managing the fearful and anxious child 197<br /> </b><i>Laura Camacho-Castro</i></p> <p>Introduction 197</p> <p>What is new in behavior management? 198</p> <p>Birth to two years old 202</p> <p>Two years old 203</p> <p>Three to six years old—the preschool age 203</p> <p>Six to twelve years old 204</p> <p>The teenage years—adolescence 205</p> <p>When does fear or anxiety first develop in children? 205</p> <p>Basic behavior management techniques 206</p> <p>Should the parent remain in the operatory? 209</p> <p>Pharmacological management of behavior problems 210</p> <p>Suggested Reading 212</p> <p>References 213</p> <p><b>9 The geriatric patient: psychophysiological factors associated with aging and dental anxiety 215<br /> </b><i>Arthur A. Weiner and Kathryn Ragalis</i></p> <p>Introduction 215</p> <p>Understanding the changes associated with aging 216</p> <p>Managing the risk factors associated with aging 228</p> <p>Summary 233</p> <p>References 234</p> <p><b>10 Fear and anxiety management for the special needs patient 241<br /> </b><i>Linda M. Maytan and Gina M. Terenzi</i></p> <p>Introduction 241</p> <p>Let us meet and evaluate your patients 243</p> <p>Sensory perception modalities for treatment and communication 249</p> <p>Alternative modalities for anxiety management 254</p> <p>Case management presentation 259</p> <p>References 262</p> <p><b>Index 265</b></p>
"As the foreword says, this is no "touchy-feely" book. "A major accomplishment of The fearful dental patient - a guide to understanding and managing is that it provides the best available scientific basis for all the methods of assessing and managing fearful patients who concerns about getting dental treatment can impair their oral health." (British Dental Association, 1 October 2011)<br />
<b>Dr. Arthur Weiner</b> has been on faculty at the Tufts University School of Dental Medicine since 1968, where he has taught courses on pain control, anxiety management, panic disorders, and behavioral dentistry. He is currently director of the Behavior Science II course at Tufts and a national spokesperson for the Academy General Dentistry on fear and patient management. Dr. Weiner is a guest lecturer at several regional and national conferences. He has also spoken in the past in Australia and France and has published extensively on the subject of fear and anxiety management in numerous journals including <i>Dental Clinics of North America</i> and <i>Acta Scandinavia Psychiatrica</i>.
<i><b>The Fearful Dental Patient: A Guide to Understanding and Managing</b></i> helps dental professionals understand the basics of fear, anxiety and phobias and the role these emotions play in creating negative behavior within the dental environment. The text contains a variety of modalities that help identify dental fear and phobia, as well as chair-side techniques and practical advice aimed at improving patient cooperation and ensuring treatment compliance. <p>Chapter topics include the basic origins of patient fear and anxiety, how to indentify dental anxiety and varied approaches to managing fearful patients of any age.  Approaches discussed employ behavioral, pharmacological, sedation and even hypnotic techniques, specifying combinations where required. Chapters also include coverage of a wide range of patients, including those with psychiatric comorbidities and special healthcare needs. The entire dental team will greatly benefit from the proven methods and practical guidance presented to better understand and treat fearful dental patients.</p> <p><b>Key Features:</b></p> <ul> <li>Written by practicing dentists with vast experience treating fearful patients</li> <li>Provides practical advice on how to minimize patients' anxiety and build the doctor-patient relationship</li> <li>Discusses a variety of management techniques both individually and in conjunction with other strategies</li> <li>Includes sample questionnaires for use in practice to assess levels of fear and anxiety—available for download at www.wiley.com/go/weiner</li> </ul>

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