Abstract

Traditionally, longitudinal studies of oral health have measured only disease progression and ignored improvements in health. This study examines methodological issues that arise in longitudinal assessment of change in oral health-related quality of life (OHRQOL). Baseline and 2-year follow-up data were used from an observational longitudinal study of 498 people aged 60 years or more living in South Australia. Oral health-related quality of life was measured using the Oral Health Impact Profile (OHIP). Three hypothesized risk predictors (tooth loss, problem-based dental visits and financial hardship) were selected to examine the effects of four methods of measuring change: categorical measures of improvement, deterioration and net change, and a quantitative measure of net change in OHIP scores. Some 31.7% of people experienced some improvement and 32.7% experienced some deterioration in OHRQOL. All three high-risk groups had approximately twice the rate of deterioration in OHRQOL compared with their corresponding low-risk groups. Surprisingly, high-risk groups also had higher rates of improvement. When measured categorically, these effects did not cancel one another, indicating that improvement and deterioration in OHRQOL can be experienced simultaneously. However, quantitative analyses cause improvements and deteriorations to cancel, and analysis of mean OHIP scores created a spurious impression that change in OHRQOL did not differ between dental visit groups. Furthermore, changes in mean OHIP scores were masked by regression to the mean. Oral health-related quality of life measures capture both improvement and deterioration in health status, creating new complexities for conceptualizing and analyzing change in longitudinal studies.

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