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- Title
Occupations associated with treatment seeking and biopsychosocial functioning at a tertiary orofacial pain clinic: A cross-sectional study.
- Authors
Sangalli, Linda; Alessandri-Bonetti, Anna; Kapos, Flavia P.; Boggero, Ian A.
- Abstract
The aim of this study was to describe whether certain occupations were over- or underrepresented and to compare biopsychosocial functioning by types of occupation and employment status among adults seeking orofacial pain (OFP) treatment. The authors extracted self-reported employment status, occupation, and biopsychosocial functioning from initial appointment records of 444 treatment-seeking adults at a university-affiliated OFP clinic. The authors categorized occupations in major and minor occupational groups according to the 2018 Standard Occupational Classification. The authors compared proportions between their sample and the corresponding state level, using a ratio and 95% CI (1.00 = equal representation in sample vs state, < 1.00 = underrepresentation, > 1.00 = overrepresentation). Among major occupational categories, health care practitioners and technical occupations were the most common in the study sample (22.4%) and the second most overrepresented (ratio, 3.20; 95% CI, 2.59 to 3.97) after the arts, design, entertainment, sports, and media occupations (ratio, 3.95; 95% CI, 2.15 to 7.26). Among minor occupational categories, teachers and instructors were the most common in the study sample (11.2%) and the most overrepresented (ratio, 90.71; 95% CI, 65.67 to 125.30), followed by managers (ratio, 43.87; 95% CI, 29.61 to 64.99) and photographers (ratio, 40.89; 95% CI, 10.23 to 163.4). No differences were observed in biopsychosocial functioning between major occupational categories. However, those not working due to health reasons or disability had worse biopsychosocial functioning (insomnia, anxiety and depression, life satisfaction, sleep health, pain intensity, pain-related interference; all P <.034) than those who were employed. Several occupations are strongly over- and underrepresented among adults seeking OFP treatment. Differences were not explained by biopsychosocial functioning. Future research should attempt to identify and address the underlying mechanisms of association between occupation and seeking care for OFP.
- Subjects
CROSS-sectional method; PAIN measurement; SELF-evaluation; OCCUPATIONS; SATISFACTION; FACIAL pain; PAIN clinics; INSOMNIA; MEDICAL care; UNIVERSITIES &; colleges; TREATMENT effectiveness; TERTIARY care; ANXIETY; DESCRIPTIVE statistics; OCCUPATIONAL therapy; ODDS ratio; SLEEP; COMPARATIVE studies; CONFIDENCE intervals; BIOPSYCHOSOCIAL model; INDUSTRIAL hygiene; MENTAL depression
- Publication
Journal of the American Dental Association (JADA), 2024, Vol 155, Issue 5, p430
- ISSN
0002-8177
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1016/j.adaj.2023.09.021