Coping with dental treatment correlates of dispositional and domain specific monitoring and blunting |
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Authors: | Florence J Van Zuuren Ad De Jongh Carin Beekers Petrouschka Swinkels |
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Institution: | 1. University of Amstemlam, Faculty of Psychology, Department of Clinical Psychology , Roetersstraat 15, 1018 WB, Amsterdam, The Netherlands;2. Academic Centre for Dentistry, Department of Social Dentistry , Louwesweg 1, 1066 EA, Amsterdam, The Netherlamh |
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Abstract: | Abstract Relations between coping style and several variables on an intermediary level were studied in a group of dentally anxious patients (N = 68) awaiting dental treatment. Monitoring was found to be positively related to the need of information: General dispositional monitoring was the best predictor of the need of information in case of more distant threat, whereas domain specific monitoring was the best predictor in case of imminent threat. Furthermore. dental trait anxiety was strongly related to early anticipatory tension, degree of anticipatory tension at several moments in time, and tension during treatment as perceived by the dentist, thereby overshadowing the weaker effects of coping style. Domain specific blunting was negatively related to desires for informational adaptations in the waiting room, and to question proneness as perceived by the dentist during treatment. It is concluded that, in order to study further effects of coping style, a sample homogeneous with respect to domain specific anxiety is needed. |
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Keywords: | Dental anxiety monitoring blunting need of information anticipatory tension |
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