Key Points
-
Provides a new insight into the emotional and psychological impacts of having teeth out under general anaesthetic (GA), entirely from a child's perspective.
-
Describes the use of a video diaries as a participatory technique for health-related research with young patients.
-
Suggests that pre- and post-operative instructions for a dental GA should be more tailored to the child's needs.
Abstract
Aim This qualitative study sought to obtain children's accounts of having dental extractions under general anaesthesia (GA). The aim was to gain greater understanding of the physical and psychological impacts from a child's perspective.
Method Ten children, aged 6-11 years, maintained a video diary to document their feelings and experiences before, and following their hospital admission. Two semi-structured home interviews supplemented the video diary data and analysis was guided by narrative approaches.
Results This research revealed new insights into children's experiences of having teeth removed under GA. Several of the post-operative impacts correlated with those previously reported by parents/carers. These were notably nausea, bleeding and tiredness, although children used different terminology. However, additional physical and psychological outcomes, both positive and negative, emerged from the children's narratives. Negative aspects included hunger, disturbed eating, being scared/worried and experiencing discomfort from the IV cannula. Interestingly, pain was not a strong theme. Positive outcomes were also reported, such as satisfaction with the resolution of their dental problem and receipt of rewards and attention from family members.
Conclusion These accounts have implications for improving patient experiences and outcomes throughout the dental GA care pathway. A review of pre-operative fasting protocols should be a priority.
Log in or create a free account to read this content
Gain free access to this article, as well as selected content from this journal and more on nature.com
or
References
Chris Deery: 'The Hall Technique will revolutionise children's dentistry'. Br Dent J 2014; 216: 156–157.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Thomson, W. Summary of: 'I felt weird and wobbly.' Child-reported impacts associated with a dental general anaesthetic. Br Dent J 216, 470–471 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.bdj.2014.331
Published:
Issue date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.bdj.2014.331
This article is cited by
-
Summary of: Inter-rater agreement between children's self-reported and parents' proxy-reported dental anxiety
British Dental Journal (2015)