2013
DOI: 10.2334/josnusd.55.123
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Psychometric properties and performance of the Oral Health Impact Profile (OHIP-14s-ar) among Sudanese adults

Abstract: The aims of this study were to develop a Sudanese-Arabic version of the English-language Oral Health Impact Profile-14 (OHIP-14), assess the psychometric properties and performance of this new instrument, and then use it to investigate the impacts of selected oral disorders on oral health-related quality of life (OHRQoL). Sudanese adolescents and adults (age, ≥ 16 years; 781 males and 1107 females) attending outpatient clinics in Khartoum State were enrolled. The OHIP-14 was adapted, and the validity and relia… Show more

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Cited by 35 publications
(44 citation statements)
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“…Similar conclusions were drawn by Silva et al [28], who observed higher values of OHIP-14 in subjects with lost teeth or deficient prosthesis in the domains: psychological discomfort and physical pain respectively, which may be interpreted as having a negative impact on the quality of life, clearly suggesting that oral disorders affect the quality of life. Similar reports were delivered by over half of the subjects in studies carried out by Khalifa et al [24] and Montero-Martin et al [20]. It was consistent with the results obtained by Slusanschi et al [21] from among a group of 45-64-year-olds who listed physical disability (56%) and physical pain (41%) as the top most affected dimensions of quality of life [21].…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 88%
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“…Similar conclusions were drawn by Silva et al [28], who observed higher values of OHIP-14 in subjects with lost teeth or deficient prosthesis in the domains: psychological discomfort and physical pain respectively, which may be interpreted as having a negative impact on the quality of life, clearly suggesting that oral disorders affect the quality of life. Similar reports were delivered by over half of the subjects in studies carried out by Khalifa et al [24] and Montero-Martin et al [20]. It was consistent with the results obtained by Slusanschi et al [21] from among a group of 45-64-year-olds who listed physical disability (56%) and physical pain (41%) as the top most affected dimensions of quality of life [21].…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 88%
“…Similar results were obtained by Papagiannopoulou et al, who observed a significant correlation between OHIP-14 and DMFT [17]. Khalifa et al also observed a correlation between worse quality of life among subjects with a higher amount of tooth decay [24]. Roumani et al also observed a significant positive correlation of high OHIP-14 score with a higher number of decayed and missing teeth, and a lower number of natural and filled teeth [27].…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 77%
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“…Además, se ha demostrado que es confiable, sensible a los cambios y exhibe una adecuada consistencia interna transcultural (Khalifa et al 2013;López-Jornet et al;Montero-Martín et al). Ya ha sido validado en más de 20 idiomas (Sanders et al, 2009b), tales como: chino, francés, alemán, japonés, malayo, portugués, inglés, somalí, sueco, etc.…”
Section: Introduccionunclassified
“…More than half of the participants reported that oral disorders affected quality of life when the OHIP-14s-ar was used to investigate the impacts of selected oral disorders on OHRQoL (27).…”
Section: From Interviewsmentioning
confidence: 99%