Publication Type : Journal Article
Publisher : Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Source : Evidence-Based Dentistry
Url : https://doi.org/10.1038/s41432-025-01148-1
Campus : Kochi
School : School of Dentistry
Year : 2025
Abstract :
Background
Oral diseases are a major public health concern in Low and Middle Income Countries (LMICs), where effective treatment requires multiple appointments. Despite its importance, limited research has explored appointment adherence among adults in these settings. This scoping review identifies the barriers and facilitators to attending dental care appointments in LMICs.
Methods
The current review followed JBI Scoping Review Methodology. The Databases of Dentistry, Oral Sciences Source (EBSCO), MEDLINE (Ovid), Embase (Ovid), Cochrane CENTRAL, Scopus and grey literature sources were searched systematically from inception till November 2024. Two independent reviewers performed data extraction using a customized JBI data extraction form. The Theoretical Domains Framework categorized barriers and facilitators of dental appointment keeping. Findings were tabulated and synthesized narratively with recommendations to improve dental attendance.
Results
Ten articles met the inclusion criteria after being screened through 5571 titles, abstracts, and 210 full texts. Knowledge, social and professional roles and identity, beliefs about capabilities, consequences, memory, attention, decision-making processes, environmental context and resources, social influence, and emotion are the main domains under which barriers and facilitators were identified. Environmental context and resource constraints were the most common barriers, while social influence was the main facilitator. The dental appointment adherence issues were determined to be comparable in public practice and university settings.
Conclusion
It is necessary to acknowledge the barriers and facilitators to dental appointment keeping to improve the effectiveness of the dental health system, ensure continuity of care, and encourage better patient-doctor relationships. Tailored interventions are required in the dental setting to effectively manage and reduce disparities in patient care.
Cite this Research Publication : Vineetha Karuveettil, Swati Sapna, Praneetha Jain, Gurleen Kaur Anand, Barriers to and facilitators for attending dental care appointments among adults in low- and middle-income countries: a scoping review, Evidence-Based Dentistry, Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2025, https://doi.org/10.1038/s41432-025-01148-1