Improving the Quality of Dentistry (IQuaD): a cluster factorial randomised controlled trial comparing the effectiveness and cost–benefit of oral hygiene advice and/or periodontal instrumentation with routine care for the prevention and management of periodontal disease in dentate adults attending dental primary care
Health Technology Assessment2018Vol. 22(38), pp. 1–144
Citations Over TimeTop 10% of 2018 papers
Craig Ramsay, Jan Clarkson, Anne Duncan, Thomas Lamont, P. A. Heasman, Dwayne Boyers, Beatriz Goulão, Debbie Bonetti, Rebecca Bruce, Jill Gouick, L. Heasman, Laura A Lovelock-Hempleman, Lorna Macpherson, Giles McCracken, Alison McDonald, Fiona McLaren-Neil, Fiona E. Mitchell, John Norrie, Marjon van der Pol, Kirsty Sim, J G Steele, Alex Sharp, Graeme Watt, Helen V Worthington, Linda Young
Abstract
This project was funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Health Technology Assessment programme and will be published in full in Health Technology Assessment; Vol. 22, No. 38. See the NIHR Journals Library website for further project information.
Related Papers
- → Oral hygiene revisited. The clinical effect of a prolonged oral hygiene phase prior to periodontal therapy in periodontitis patients. A randomized clinical study(2019)26 cited
- → Periodontal pocketing and gingival bleeding in relation to Nordic diet – results from a population‐based survey(2016)12 cited
- → The effect of mechanical oral hygiene procedures on bleeding on probing(1990)31 cited
- → The effect of mechanical oral hygiene procedures on bleeding on probing(1992)1 cited
- Periodontal pocketing and gingival bleeding in relation to Nordic diet - results from a population-based survey(2016)