| SDJ |
| Editorial Board |
| Advisory Board |
| Information for authors |
| Submit manuscript |
| Subscribe to SDJ |
| Search SDJ |
| About SDJ |
| SDJ Current Issue |
| Journal Archives |
| 2010-22 |
| 22-1 |
ISSN (Print) 1013-9052
EISSN 1658-3558
The Saudi Dental Journal,
P.O. Box 52500,
Riyadh 11563,
Kingdom of Saudi Arabia
P.O. Box 52500,
Riyadh 11563,
Kingdom of Saudi Arabia
| Tel. |
966-1-467-7328 |
| Fax. |
933-1-467-7308 / 966-1-467-7534 |
| Email |
saudidj@ksu.edu.sa |
|
Knowledge, attitude and behavior about oral cancer, among a group of adult Jeddah population
Safia A.Al-Attas,BDS,MSc,FAAOM
The purpose of the current study was to assess the
level of knowledge, opinion and practice regarding oral cancer (OC), among various
sections of Jeddah general population, Saudi Arabia. A sample of 1,080
individuals answered a self-administered questionnaire that investigated three
parts related to OC: (1) Knowledge (OC
occurrence, causes, clinical presentation, treatment, sources of information);
(2) Attitude (regular dental visit, capability of the dentist to screen for OC
and curability of the disease); (3) Behavior (OC check up and
examination). The collected data were
analyzed and variable relations expressed considering the demographic data,
medical status and smoking habit.
Results showed that 47.8% of the respondents had never heard of OC
existence, and most of the others did not know very much about it as
reflectedbythehigh percentage of "don't know" answers and incorrect
responses. Results also indicated that
the greater awareness of OC was among males compared and higher among highly
educated individuals (P<0.05).
Television, books and journals as well as the dentist in descending
order were the primary sources of the subjects' oral health information. Many participants (84.7%) tended to seek care
regarding suspicious oral lesions from their dentist and the majority (91.1%)
agreed that early OC is curable. Only
17.1% of the respondents visited dentist regularly every six month for check up
and only 2.1% of the respondents reported that they had OC examination. We concluded that there was extensive
misinformation and a general lack of knowledge and positive attitude and
behavior among the participants in this study regarding OC and that the best
approaches to informing the public on OC prevention and early detection should
be planned and is recommended.
Saudi Dental Journal 2005;17(1):34-42. |






