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Clinical Oral Investigations | 2011

Interrelation between obesity, oral health and life-style factors among Turkish school children.

Ayse Basak Cinar; Heikki Murtomaa

Obesity, dental caries and periodontal diseases are among major public health concerns which may affect children’s growth and development. This study seeks any clustering between obesity, oral health and life-style factors among school children in Istanbul, Turkey. A cross-sectional study of children, 10- to 12-year-olds, from a public and a private school was undertaken with questionnaires for children and their mothers and child oral health data, in Istanbul (n = 611). DMFS (number of decayed, missing and filled surfaces of permanent teeth), CPI (Community Periodontal Index), body mass index (BMI) and life-style factors (tooth-brushing frequency, milk consumption at breakfast and bedtimes on school nights) of children were examined. Data analysis included factor analysis, Student’s t test and Chi-square tests by cross-tabulation. Public school children were more dentally diseased but less obese than were those in private school (P < 0.001). They more frequently had calculus (62%) and reported non-recommended tooth-brushing (68%) than did those in private school (37%, 56%; P < 0.05). Principal component analysis revealed that DMFS, CPI and BMI shared the same cluster among all children. A need exists for addressing obesity, oral health and nutrition jointly in health promotion strategies to improve children’s well-being and empower good life-style factors.


International Dental Journal | 2014

Health promotion for patients with diabetes: health coaching or formal health education?

Ayse Basak Cinar; Lone Schou

PURPOSE The purpose of this study was to determine if a Health Coaching (HC) approach compared with formal health education (HE) resulted in better health outcomes among type II diabetes (T2DM) patients in improving glycaemic control and oral health, by use of clinical and subjective outcome measures. METHODS The study is part of a prospective intervention among randomly selected T2DM patients (n = 186) in Istanbul, Turkey. The data analysed were clinical [glycated haemoglobin (HbA(1C)), clinical attachment loss (CAL)] and psychological measures [tooth-brushing self efficacy (TBSES)]. Data were collected initially and at the end of intervention. Participants were allocated randomly to HC (intervention) (n = 77) and HE (control) (n = 111) groups. RESULTS At baseline, there was no statistical difference between HC and HE regarding clinical and psychological measures, (P > 0.05). At post-intervention the HC group had significantly lower HBA(1C) and CAL (reduction: 7%, 56%) than the HE group (reduction: HbA(1C) 0%; CAL 26%), (P ≤ 0.01). Similarly, HC group, compared with HE group, had better TBSES (increase: 61% vs. 25%) and stress (reduction: 16% vs. 1%), (P ≤ 0.01). Among high-risk group patients, the HC patients had significant improvements compared with the HE group (reduction: HbA(1C) 16% vs. 5%; CAL 63% vs. 18%; stress 39% vs. 2%; fold increase: TBSES 6.6 vs. 3.6) (P ≤ 0.01). CONCLUSIONS The present findings may imply that HC has a significantly greater impact on better management of oral health and glycaemic control than HE. It is notable that the impact was more significant among high-risk group patients, thus HC may be recommended especially for high-risk group patients.


The Scientific World Journal | 2014

Interrelation between Patient Satisfaction and Patient-Provider Communication in Diabetes Management

Ayse Basak Cinar; Lone Schou

The present study aims to assess how patient satisfaction with medical provider-patient communication can affect oral health, diabetes, and psychobehavioural measures among type 2 diabetes (T2DM) patients. It is part of a prospective intervention study among randomly selected T2DM patients, in Turkey. The data analyzed were Community Periodontal Need Index (CPI), HbA1c, patient satisfaction with communication, and psychobehavioural variables. Data was collected initially and at the end of the intervention. The participants were allocated to either health coaching (HC) or health education (HE). At baseline, there were no statistical differences between the HC and the HE groups on any of the measures (P > 0.05). Patients in both the HC and the HE groups had low satisfaction with communication. At postintervention, the increase in patient satisfaction with communication in the HC group was significantly higher than that in the HE group (P = 0.001). Principal component analysis revealed that patient satisfaction with communication shared the same cluster with clinical measures (CPI and HbA1c) and quality of life in the HC group. In conclusion, the present study showed, to our knowledge for the first time, that overall patient satisfaction with medical care provider-patient communication, empowered by HC approach, was interrelated with well-being of T2DM patients, in terms of psychobehavioural and clinical measures.


Systematic Reviews | 2017

Is health coaching effective in changing the health status and behaviour of prisoners?—a systematic review protocol

Nadja Almondes; Denise Downie; Ayse Basak Cinar; Derek Richards; Ruth Freeman

BackgroundThis is a protocol for a systematic review of the impact of health coaching on changing the health behaviour of offenders. Prisoners are more likely to suffer from health-related issues when compared to the general population. Health coaching has been shown to influence health outcomes of patients with chronic conditions. This review, therefore, aims to assess the effectiveness of health coaching interventions on the health of adolescent and adult offenders in custodial institutions.MethodsWe plan to conduct a systematic review of the current literature on health coaching interventions delivered in the prison setting. We will include randomised controlled trials and observational studies that compare health coaching to the usual care or other alternative interventions. The ideal interventions will be delivered either by health professionals or peer coaches, and the outcomes extracted in the data collection will be disease-specific, clients’ life and self-management skills, behavioural and psychosocial outcomes. If appropriate, a meta-analysis of the data collected will be carried out on the last stage of the review.DiscussionThis systematic review will identify and gather evidence on the impact of health coaching interventions delivered in the prison setting and can function as a supporting material for health professionals, prison staff, the healthcare system, and public health departments when considering delivering health coaching.Systematic review registrationPROSPERO CRD42016053237.


Journal of Evidence Based Dental Practice | 2014

Patients With Non-Apnea Sleep Disorder Have an Increased Risk of Periodontal Diseases

Ayse Basak Cinar

Article Title and Bibliographic Information Non-apnea sleep disorder increases the risk of periodontal disease: a retrospective population-based cohort study. Lee CF, Lin MC, Lin CL, Yen CM, Lin KY, Chang YJ, Kao CH. J Periodontol 2014;85(4):e65-71. Reviewer Ayse Basak Cinar, DDS, MBA, PhD Purpose/Question The authors attempt to investigate whether non-apnea sleep disorder (NA-SD) (excluding apnea sleep disorder or named obstructive sleep apnea disorder) increases the risk of periodontal disease. Source of Funding The study was supported in part by the study projects (DMR-102-014 and DMR-102-023) in China Medical University Hospital, Taiwan; Taiwan Ministry of Health and Welfare Clinical Trial Research Center for Excellence (DOH102-TD-B-111-004); Taiwan Ministry of Health and Welfare Cancer Research Center for Excellence (MOHW103-TD-B-111-03); and International Research-Intensive Centers of Excellence (NSC101-2911-I-00 2-303), Taiwan Type of Study/Design Retrospective cohort study Level of Evidence Level 2: Limited-quality, patient-oriented evidence Strength of Recommendation Grade Not applicable


Oral Health & Preventive Dentistry | 2011

Clustering of obesity and dental caries with lifestyle factors among Danish adolescents.

Ayse Basak Cinar; Lisa Bøge Christensen; Børge Hede


Oral Health & Preventive Dentistry | 2009

Oral health-related self-efficacy beliefs and toothbrushing: Finnish and Turkish pre-adolescents' and their mothers' responses.

Ayse Basak Cinar; Battsetseg Tseveenjav; Heikki Murtomaa


Clinical Oral Investigations | 2013

Relationship between oral health, diabetes management and sleep apnea

Ayse Basak Cinar; Inci Oktay; Lone Schou


Clinical Oral Investigations | 2014

“Smile healthy to your diabetes”: health coaching-based intervention for oral health and diabetes management

Ayse Basak Cinar; Inci Oktay; Lone Schou


European Journal of Dentistry | 2008

The Life-course Approach in Assessment of Dental Health: A Cross Sectional Study among Finnish and Turkish Pre-adolescents

Ayse Basak Cinar; Heikki Murtomaa; Battsetseg Tseveenjav

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Lone Schou

University of Copenhagen

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Lone Schou

University of Copenhagen

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Børge Hede

University of Copenhagen

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