M. Bala, Muhammad Abubakar Kaura, Anas Bawa Tsafe, Rufai Jaafar, Sadeeq Abubakar Fawa, Ahmad Abdulkadir
{"title":"牙科辅助人员对预防坏疽性口炎的认识、态度和做法:尼日利亚西北部横断面研究","authors":"M. Bala, Muhammad Abubakar Kaura, Anas Bawa Tsafe, Rufai Jaafar, Sadeeq Abubakar Fawa, Ahmad Abdulkadir","doi":"10.4103/jorr.jorr_42_23","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"\n \n The objective is to evaluate dental auxiliaries’ knowledge, attitudes, and practices for the prevention of noma disease.\n \n \n \n This was a cross-sectional study conducted over 6 months. After obtaining ethical clearance from the Sokoto and Zamfara State Ministries of Health, all consenting dental assistant staff who met the selection criteria were administered a validated questionnaire containing 17 questions assessing the respondents’ knowledge, attitudes, and practices. They were recruited using a self-administered questionnaire. The overall score was classified as “low” if the average score was 50% or less (50% or less), satisfactory (51%–69%), or good (70% or more). Data were analyzed using IBM SPSS version 20 software.\n \n \n \n A total of 149 respondents returned the questionnaire, of which 80 (53.7%) were men and 69 (46.3%) were women. The mean ± standard deviation age of respondents was 27.37 ± 7.00 years, with a range of 20–58 years. The age of respondents was divided into four groups, and the majority of 112 respondents (75.2%) were in their 30s. The majority of respondents, 141 (94.6%), know about the prevention of noma disease. The total respondent score was 1827 points (72.1%), which was evaluated as “good.”\n \n \n \n Knowledge, attitudes, and practices of dental auxiliaries in the field of noma prevention are good. Dental auxiliaries, if supervised and appropriately trained, can play a role in noma prevention by actively participating in and disseminating information on specific preventive measures such as scaling and polishing.\n","PeriodicalId":31361,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Oral Research and Review","volume":"143 1 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-07-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Dental auxiliaries’ knowledge, attitude, and practices regarding noma prevention: A cross-sectional study in Northwestern Nigeria\",\"authors\":\"M. Bala, Muhammad Abubakar Kaura, Anas Bawa Tsafe, Rufai Jaafar, Sadeeq Abubakar Fawa, Ahmad Abdulkadir\",\"doi\":\"10.4103/jorr.jorr_42_23\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"\\n \\n The objective is to evaluate dental auxiliaries’ knowledge, attitudes, and practices for the prevention of noma disease.\\n \\n \\n \\n This was a cross-sectional study conducted over 6 months. After obtaining ethical clearance from the Sokoto and Zamfara State Ministries of Health, all consenting dental assistant staff who met the selection criteria were administered a validated questionnaire containing 17 questions assessing the respondents’ knowledge, attitudes, and practices. They were recruited using a self-administered questionnaire. The overall score was classified as “low” if the average score was 50% or less (50% or less), satisfactory (51%–69%), or good (70% or more). Data were analyzed using IBM SPSS version 20 software.\\n \\n \\n \\n A total of 149 respondents returned the questionnaire, of which 80 (53.7%) were men and 69 (46.3%) were women. The mean ± standard deviation age of respondents was 27.37 ± 7.00 years, with a range of 20–58 years. The age of respondents was divided into four groups, and the majority of 112 respondents (75.2%) were in their 30s. The majority of respondents, 141 (94.6%), know about the prevention of noma disease. The total respondent score was 1827 points (72.1%), which was evaluated as “good.”\\n \\n \\n \\n Knowledge, attitudes, and practices of dental auxiliaries in the field of noma prevention are good. 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Dental auxiliaries’ knowledge, attitude, and practices regarding noma prevention: A cross-sectional study in Northwestern Nigeria
The objective is to evaluate dental auxiliaries’ knowledge, attitudes, and practices for the prevention of noma disease.
This was a cross-sectional study conducted over 6 months. After obtaining ethical clearance from the Sokoto and Zamfara State Ministries of Health, all consenting dental assistant staff who met the selection criteria were administered a validated questionnaire containing 17 questions assessing the respondents’ knowledge, attitudes, and practices. They were recruited using a self-administered questionnaire. The overall score was classified as “low” if the average score was 50% or less (50% or less), satisfactory (51%–69%), or good (70% or more). Data were analyzed using IBM SPSS version 20 software.
A total of 149 respondents returned the questionnaire, of which 80 (53.7%) were men and 69 (46.3%) were women. The mean ± standard deviation age of respondents was 27.37 ± 7.00 years, with a range of 20–58 years. The age of respondents was divided into four groups, and the majority of 112 respondents (75.2%) were in their 30s. The majority of respondents, 141 (94.6%), know about the prevention of noma disease. The total respondent score was 1827 points (72.1%), which was evaluated as “good.”
Knowledge, attitudes, and practices of dental auxiliaries in the field of noma prevention are good. Dental auxiliaries, if supervised and appropriately trained, can play a role in noma prevention by actively participating in and disseminating information on specific preventive measures such as scaling and polishing.