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Dive into the research topics where Sharron E. Rich is active.

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Featured researches published by Sharron E. Rich.


American Journal of Public Health | 2014

Effects of cuts in Medicaid on dental-related visits and costs at a safety-net hospital.

Martha Neely; Judith A. Jones; Sharron E. Rich; Lillelenny Santana Gutierrez; Pushkar Mehra

We used data from Boston Medical Center, Massachusetts, to determine whether dental-related emergency department (ED) visits and costs increased when Medicaid coverage for adult dental care was reduced in July 2010. In this retrospective study of existing data, we examined the safety-net hospitals dental-related ED visits and costs for 3 years before and 2 years after Massachusetts Health Care Reform. Dental-related ED visits increased 2% the first and 14% the second year after Medicaid cuts. Percentage increases were highest among older adults, minorities, and persons receiving charity care, Medicaid, and Medicare.


Journal of Periodontology | 2017

A Clinical Validation of Self-Reported Periodontitis Among Participants in the Black Women’s Health Study

Brenda Heaton; Nicholas B. Gordon; Raul I. Garcia; Lynn Rosenberg; Sharron E. Rich; Matthew P. Fox; Yvette C. Cozier

BACKGROUND There is a paucity of data on the validity of self-report of periodontal disease in African Americans. The Black Womens Health Study (BWHS), a United States national cohort study of 59,000 black women followed via mailed questionnaires since 1995, offered the opportunity to clinically validate self-reported periodontitis among a sample of participants. METHODS Oral health questionnaires were sent to study participants residing in Massachusetts. Respondents living in the Boston metro area were invited for clinical examination. Self-reports were compared with clinical data obtained from the 77 women (mean age: 59 years) who were examined. The authors examined the predictive ability of individual and combined questionnaire items with respect to clinical periodontal disease severity. Validation parameters were calculated for each question, and receiver operating characteristic statistics were generated to compare questionnaire items. RESULTS Periodontitis prevalence in the validation sample was 24% for severe periodontitis and 61% for moderate disease. Performance of individual questionnaire items with respect to predicting periodontitis was better for severe compared with moderate disease. Combinations of questionnaire items improved the predictive ability with respect to severe disease beyond that of individual questionnaire items. CONCLUSIONS Prevalence of severe periodontitis was similar to other age-comparable populations, without regard for race or sex, whereas prevalence of total periodontitis (moderate and severe) among women of similar age and/or race was much higher. Predictive ability of questionnaire items assessed in the BWHS was similar to that in other studies.


Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | 2015

The Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension Diet and New and Recurrent Root Caries Events in Men

Elizabeth Krall Kaye; Brenda Heaton; Woosung Sohn; Sharron E. Rich; Avron Spiro; Raul I. Garcia

To examine the effect of overall dietary quality on number of teeth with new or recurrent root caries events during follow‐up (root caries increment).


Journal of Public Health Dentistry | 2009

Use of Patient Self-Report Oral Health Outcome Measures in Assessment of Dental Treatment Outcomes

Wanda G. Wright; Judith A. Jones; Avron Spiro; Sharron E. Rich; Nancy R. Kressin

OBJECTIVE To assess the sensitivity of a newly developed brief measure of oral health-related quality of life (OQOL). METHODS Self-assessed oral health and OQOL were measured in three groups of patients who had presented for either prophylaxis (n = 32), endodontic care (n = 15), or for a denture (n = 16) in a dental school setting before and after treatment. Main outcome measures included the single-item self-report of oral health (OH-1) and the 6- and 12-item versions of a new OQOL instrument. General linear modeling was used to compute means of self-reported oral health by treatment group. RESULTS Of the 63 patients who completed the baseline questionnaire, 44 (70 percent) returned questionnaires after treatment. The sample averaged 43 +/- 15 years, 48 percent male and 55 percent with some college education. Ethnic representation included 35 percent White, 33 percent Black, and 32 percent other - mostly Latino. The mean self-reported number of teeth was 20.6. In terms of sensitivity, significant differences were observed between the treatment groups on the items assessing being upset (P < 0.05), feeling depressed (P < 0.05), and uncomfortable about the appearance of teeth or dentures (P < 0.05). However, magnitude of change, as measured by an effect size, was characterized as minimal to small in the recall and endodontic groups and borderline moderate in the denture group. CONCLUSION The measure was sensitive to differences within groups, with a small to borderline magnitude of change.


Journal of Public Health Dentistry | 2013

Leading determinants of efficient dental care delivery

M. Marianne Jurasic; Gretchen Gibson; Sharron E. Rich; Terry G. O'Toole; Susan Bestgen; Patricia E. Arola; Judith A. Jones

OBJECTIVE Identify structure and process variables that significantly contributed to dentist productivity across VA Dental Service clinics using multiple VA national datasets from fiscal year 2010. METHODS A retrospective, longitudinal analysis with the primary outcome of care provided, as measured by relative value units per clinically mapped full-time employee equivalent dentist, per year. Predictor variables included physical plant variables, staffing variables, complexity of the patient population, workplace climate, and environment of care. Predictor variables were initially assessed in a bivariate analysis with the primary outcome and those significant at P < 0.2 were entered into an ordinary least squares regression model. RESULTS Dentist productivity and several predictor variables were significantly different between sites with and without resident training programs; therefore, two explanatory models were constructed. In both models, increasing the assistant-to-dentist ratio was the most important driver for increasing productivity. Additional drivers include the resident-to-dentist ratio, use of technology, and connectedness and engagement with the medical center as demonstrated by participation in various committees and/or boards. Final models explained over 50 percent of the variance in productivity. CONCLUSIONS In multiprovider settings, predictors of dentist clinical productivity differ for sites with and without residency training programs. Although the assistant-to-dentist ratio is the most explanatory for each type of setting, other variables such as the resident-to-dentist ratio, use of technology, and connectedness/engagement with the medical center are uniquely significant to the two types of service sites and should also be considered to maximize productivity.


Journal of Public Health Dentistry | 2017

Development of the Teen Oral Health-Related Quality of Life Instrument.

Wanda G. Wright; Avron Spiro; Judith A. Jones; Sharron E. Rich; Raul I. Garcia

OBJECTIVE The aim of this study was to develop the Teen Oral Health-Related Quality of Life instrument (TOQOL) and demonstrate its validity and reliability in a diverse sample of 13-18-year-old adolescents. METHODS A total of 363 adolescents aged 13-18 years participated in this cross sectional study. Oral screening examinations were conducted to collect oral health status data. Adolescents completed the TOQOL and a generic measure of health-related quality of life, the PedsQL. The psychometric properties of the TOQOL were evaluated in terms of face, content, convergent, concurrent and discriminant validity in addition to internal reliability. RESULTS The 16-item TOQOL covers five domains: Physical functioning, Role functioning, Social functioning, Oral problems, and Emotional functioning. The total scale and subscales showed satisfactory reliability with Cronbach alpha ranging from 0.75 to 0.92. TOQOL scores showed significant associations with perceived oral health status and the PedsQL (convergent validity) and discriminated well between adolescents with caries and adolescents who were caries free (discriminate validity). CONCLUSION The TOQOL is a valid and reliable oral health-related quality of life measurement that can be recommended for self-report in adolescents aged 13-18 years.


Journal of Public Health Dentistry | 2013

Hispanic parents' reading language preference and pediatric oral health-related quality of life

İffet Yazıcıoğlu; Judith A. Jones; Dharma E. Cortés; Sharron E. Rich; Raul I. Garcia

OBJECTIVES This study compared scores and psychometric properties from self-identified Hispanic parents who completed Pediatric Oral Health-related Quality of life (POQL) parent report-on-child questionnaires in Spanish or English. The study hypothesized that there were no differences in psychometric properties or POQL scores by parent reading language preference, controlling for dental needs, childs place of birth, age, insurance and use of care. METHODS POQL scores were computed, and the internal consistency, feasibility, factor structure and construct validity of the Spanish language version assessed. RESULTS Hispanic parents (N = 387) of 8-14 year old children (mean age 10.2) completed the survey; 237 in Spanish and 150 in English. Internal consistency scores were higher (Cronbach α range = .86-.93) among Hispanic parents who completed the questionnaire in Spanish than in English (.66-.86). POQL scores from parents who completed questionnaires in Spanish were higher (worse) overall (6.03 vs. 3.82, P = 0.022), as were physical (11.61 vs. 6.54, P = 0.001) and role functioning domains (1.87 vs. 0.82, P = 0.029). Items for crying, pain, and eating were higher (P < 0.05) for the Spanish than the English completers. However, POQL scores were associated only with need for care (P = 0.05), parent reports of dental visit in the last year (P = 0.05) and worse oral health than a year ago (P = 0.002), controlling for reading language (not significant) and visit in last year in the final multivariate linear regression.


Journal of Clinical Periodontology | 2007

Does periodontal care improve glycemic control? The Department of Veterans Affairs Dental Diabetes Study

Judith A. Jones; Donald R. Miller; Carolyn J. Wehler; Sharron E. Rich; Elizabeth Krall-Kaye; Linda C. McCoy; Cindy L. Christiansen; James A. Rothendler; Raul I. Garcia


Journal of the American Dental Association | 2008

Adverse events associated with chlorhexidine use: Results from the Department of Veterans Affairs Dental Diabetes Study

Linda C. McCoy; Carolyn J. Wehler; Sharron E. Rich; Raul I. Garcia; Donald R. Miller; Judith A. Jones


Journal of Public Health Dentistry | 2011

Development and validation of a measure of pediatric oral health-related quality of life: the POQL

Noelle Huntington; Dante Spetter; Judith A. Jones; Sharron E. Rich; Raul I. Garcia; Avron Spiro

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