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Dog-Assisted Therapy in Dentistry

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Animal Assisted Therapy
Dental Anxiety
Pediatric Dentistry
Interventions
Procedure: Therapydog
Registration Number
NCT03324347
Lead Sponsor
University of Tromso
Brief Summary

Dog-assisted therapy (DAT) is used in several contexts within various areas of health care. One documented effect is that the proximity of a dog may lower anxiety in perceived stressful situations. Many individuals are afraid to visit the dentist, and someone to the extent that they need medication or anesthesia in order to complete their dental treatment. Based on the literature and own empirical observations, the investigators believe that dog-assisted therapy in connection with dental care may have a positive effect on children with dental anxiety or children that avoid dental care. It is desirable to restrict the use of drugs for these patients because of associated risk and side effects.

The purpose of this pilot study is to evaluate whether using a specially trained therapy dog can have a positive effect on children who are afraid in a dental care setting. Eligible participants (n=16) will meet twice at the dental clinic; one treatment session with a therapy dog in the dental clinic and one without. The therapy dog will be accompanied by a certified dog handler. The investigators will measure physiological variations before, during and after the treatment session. The guardian will complete validated questionnaires portraying the participant's experience of previous dental care. The participant and their guardian will also complete validated questionnaires describing their reactions from the two treatment sessions. A descriptive log for each session will be completed by the investigators.

Detailed Description

Not available

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
16
Inclusion Criteria
  • Children who are afraid of visiting the dental office / children who avoid dental treatment,
  • Children who accept the presence of a dog,
  • Parents or guardians who accept the presence of a dog
Exclusion Criteria
  • Children or parent/guardian that are afraid of dogs,
  • Children or parent/guardian with known dog allergy,
  • Children who are immunocompromised,
  • Children who cannot understand or complete the patient-questionnaire

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
CROSSOVER
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
TherapydogTherapydogA certified therapydog (together with a certified dog-handler) will be present in the dental clinic while the child will undergo a clinical dental examination by licenced pediatric dentist.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Examination achieved; Yes or Noup to 8 weeks

Whether the child complied or not, so that a clinical oral examination could be accomplished within 30 minutes

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Skin conductance (Electrodermal activity)up to 8 weeks

Skin conductance will be measured to assess if dog-assisted therapy (DAT) minimizes stress and anxiety. (Biopac Systems software)

Heart rate variabilityup to 8 weeks

Heart rate will be measured to assess if dog-assisted therapy (DAT) minimizes stress and anxiety. (Biopac Systems software)

Child satisfactionup to 8 weeks

The child will describe his/her feelings by marking one of 6 different emoticon-style facial expressions where number 1 illustrate the most happy face and number 6 illustrates not happy at all.

Measurement of anxiety through the CFSS-DS scale (Dental subscale of Children's Fear Survey Schedule)up to 8 weeks

The parent/guardian will describe the child's dental fear on a five point scale where 1 is no fear and 5 is the worst fear.

Salivary cortisol levelup to 8 weeks

Measurement of cortisol from participant's saliva sample to assess if dog-assisted therapy (DAT) minimizes stress and anxiety

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Department of Clinical Dentistry, UiT The Arctic University of Norway

🇳🇴

Tromsø, Norway

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