Construct Validity of Locker’s Global Oral Health Item

Author:

Thomson W.M.1,Mejia G.C.2,Broadbent J.M.1,Poulton R.3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Oral Sciences, Sir John Walsh Research Institute, School of Dentistry, The University of Otago, 280 Great King St., Dunedin, 9001, New Zealand

2. Australian Research Centre for Population Oral Health, The University of Adelaide, South Australia, Australia

3. Department of Preventive and Social Medicine, Dunedin School of Medicine, The University of Otago, New Zealand

Abstract

With clinical oral examinations not always possible in health surveys, researchers may instead be invited to add questions to a wider health survey. In such situations, an item is needed which adequately represents both clinical and self-reported oral health. This study investigated the clinical validity of Locker’s global self-reported oral health item among young middle-aged adults in populations in New Zealand and Australia. Clinical examination and self-report data (including the OHIP-14) were obtained from recent national dental surveys in NZ and Australia, and from age-38 assessments in the Dunedin Multidisciplinary Health and Development Study. National dataset analyses involved 35- to 44-year-olds. Caries and tooth-loss experience showed mostly consistent, statistically significant gradients across the Locker item responses; those responding ‘Excellent’ had the lowest scores, and those responding ‘Poor’ the highest. Periodontitis experience gradients in the NZ national sample were mainly as hypothesized; those rating their oral health as ‘Poor’ had the highest disease experience. OHIP-14 gradients across the Locker item responses were consistent and as hypothesized. The proportion of disease in the population borne by those ‘Fair’ or ‘Poor’ ranged from 26% to 72%. These findings provide preliminary support for the measure’s validity as a global self-reported oral health measure in young middle-aged adults.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Dentistry

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