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Community Dental Health

Cover Date
September 2009
Print ISSN
0265 539X
Electronic ISSN
Vol
26
Issue
3

Articles from this issue

TitlePage StartPage EndD.O.I.
Editorial - The contributions of Edward H. Angle to dental public health 130 131 10.1922/CDH_2570Peck02
The fractional urinary fluoride excretion of adults consuming naturally and artificially fluoridated water and the influence of water hardness: A randomized trial. 132 137 10.1922/CDH_2339Villa06
The prevalence and severity of dental fluorosis in the high and low altitude parts of Central Plateau, Nigeria 138 142 10.1922/CDH_2287Akosu05
Prevalence of enamel defects related to pre-, peri- and postnatal factors in a Brazilian population. 143 149 10.1922/CDH_2268Massoni07
Development of a psychometric scale to assess satisfaction with dental care among Sri Lankans 150 156 10.1922/CDH_2316Usgodaarachchi07
Consent of older children participating in BASCD coordinated dental epidemiology surveys in Wales. 157 161 10.1922/CDH_2296Monaghan05
Predicting relative need for urgent dental care 162 169 10.1922/CDH_2254Spencer08
A comparison of Personal Dental Service (PDS) and General Dental Service (GDS) patients in terms of reported interventions, oral health and dentists’ perceptions 170 176 10.1922/CDH_2259Hill07
Hopelessness, depression and oral health concerns reported by community dwelling older Australians 177 182 10.1922/CDH_2310Quine06
Higher-order exploratory factor analysis of the Dental Subscale of Children’s Fear Survey Schedule in a Taiwanese population. 183 187 10.1922/CDH_2322Chang05
Opportunities and challenges to promoting oral health in primary schools 188 192 10.1922/CDH_2289Gill05


Development of a psychometric scale to assess satisfaction with dental care among Sri Lankans


Article Price £10.00
Page Start
150
Page End
156
D.O.I.
10.1922/CDH_2316Usgodaarachchi07
Authors
  • I.R. Perera
  • U.S. Usgodaarachchi

Abstract

Objective: To develop and validate a psychometric scale to assess dental satisfaction among Sri Lankans. Design: A population based cross sectional study, where the data were collected by a postal questionnaire. A 22-item scale was developed to measure dental satisfaction. Participants: 1,000 Sri Lankans aged 18-75 years, selected by cluster sampling with probability proportionate to size technique, using National Voters’ register. Outcome measures: Reliability of the scale was assessed by internal consistency using Cronbach’s alpha and corrected item-total correlations. Construct validity was determined by factor analysis and acceptability was assessed by percentage of item-specific non-response. Results: The overall response rate was 30.9%. Among respondents, analysis was limited to dental care users within two years (n=117). Item-specific non-response was low, ranging from 3.4% to 9.4%. Four (negatively worded) items were removed from the scale due to poor internal consistency (corrected item-total correlations <0.2). After removal, corrected item-total correlations of remaining 18 items were improved, ranging from 0.23 to 0.76. Factor analysis revealed a four factor solution, interpreted as: “outcome of care/clinic context” (8-items), “factors related to treatment process” (7-items), “convenience” (2-items) and “cost of care” (single item). Identified factors explained 64.56% of the variance of the scale. The Cronbach’s alpha values for the first three dimensions were 0.90, 0.87 and 0.60 respectively and for the overall construct it was 0.91. Conclusions: The present scale appeared to be a valid and reliable instrument for measuring dental satisfaction among Sri Lankans, but merits further refinements to explore detailed aspects of it.

Keywords: Dental satisfaction, factor analysis, reliability, validity.


Editorial correspondence and enquires:

Professor D O'Mullane
c/o Ms Colette Spicer
The Editorial Assistant
Oral Health Research Services Centre
University Dental School & Hospital
Wilton, Cork
Ireland.
e-mail: cdh@ucc.ie

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