Oral Health Status as a Mediating Effect Between Psychosocial Factors and Oral Health-Related Quality of Life
Linxin Jiang, Natalie Loschke, Dirk Ziebolz, Daniel R. Reissmann, Gerhard Schmalz

TL;DR
This study shows that better oral health partly explains how psychological factors like self-efficacy in oral hygiene improve quality of life.
Contribution
The study identifies oral health status as a mediator between psychosocial factors and oral health-related quality of life.
Findings
Oral health status mediates 12.6% of the effect of psychosocial factors on OHRQoL.
Higher self-efficacy in oral hygiene is linked to better oral health and improved quality of life.
Psychosocial and oral health strategies combined can enhance treatment outcomes and public health efforts.
Abstract
While oral health status and psychosocial factors are associated with oral health-related quality of life (OHRQoL), the mechanisms remain unclear. This study aims to investigate their relationships and explore potential mediating effects. Cross-sectional data were collected from dental examination and psychosocial scales of patients who visited the dental clinic for routine check-ups and/or preventive measures in 2023. All data were analysed using SPSS with the AMOS plugin. Data preprocessing included Little’s MCAR test and multiple imputation. Reliability and validity tests were conducted to optimize the psychosocial scales. The Mann-Whitney U test and Spearman test analysed the differences and correlations between variables. A hierarchical multiple linear regression identified factors associated with the OHRQoL score and identified potential mediating effects. The structural equation…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDental Health and Care Utilization · Health, psychology, and well-being · Oral microbiology and periodontitis research
