The role of age and gender in the relationship between personality traits, quality of life, and decision-making about orthognathic surgery—A cross-sectional study
Renata Vidakovic, Martina Zigante, Jeta Kelmendi, Stjepan Spalj, Andrej Kielbassa, Andrej Kielbassa, Andrej Kielbassa, Andrej Kielbassa

TL;DR
This study shows that age has a bigger impact than gender on how personality traits and quality of life influence decisions to have orthognathic surgery.
Contribution
The study reveals that age, rather than gender, is the key factor shaping the influence of personality and quality of life on surgery decisions.
Findings
Adults were significantly more likely to accept surgery than adolescents.
In adults, lower self-esteem and higher perfectionism were linked to surgery acceptance.
Oral function and facial esthetics concerns influenced surgery acceptance in both age groups.
Abstract
To explore how age and gender shape the relationship between personality traits, quality of life (QoL), and a patient’s decision to undergo surgery for correction of dentofacial deformity. In a cross-sectional study, 108 individuals aged 14–53 years (median age 18 years; interquartile range 17–26) with a moderate to very great need for surgery according to the Index of Orthognathic Functional Treatment Need were assessed. There were 43% adolescents (≤17 years) and 68% females. Participants completed validated questionnaires measuring personality characteristics (Big Five Inventory, Multidimensional Perfectionism Scale, and Self-Esteem Scale), along with the Orthognathic Quality of Life Questionnaire. The decision to accept or refuse surgery was recorded. Overall, 51% of patients accepted surgery (48% of females and 57% of males). Adults were more likely to accept surgery than…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOrthodontics and Dentofacial Orthopedics · Personality Traits and Psychology · Dental Education, Practice, Research
