What it feels like to live with oral health stigma, in the words and numbers of 333 adults across England.
Doughty, J.1 Engali, B.1* Evans, B.1
Paisi, M.2 Rodriguez, A.3
1 University of Liverpool, England
2 University of Plymouth, England
3 University of Dundee, Scotland
Oral health stigma is a unique phenomenon that harms and dehumanises. Until now, most research has focused on individual oral health conditions, or on other stigmatised characteristics, rather than on the underpinning phenomenon and theory of oral health stigma itself. The EXIST study set out to change that, by exploring the lived experience of oral health stigma among adults in England.
Most came from South West England (26.9%) and the East Midlands (21.4%). Around a third reported fair oral health (35.3%). Missing back teeth (39.5%) and staining (37.9%) were among the most commonly reported concerns.
Stigma turns into everyday behaviours of hiding, avoiding and self-blame. Among the adults surveyed:
avoid socialising altogether
avoid smiling in photographs
cover their mouth when speaking or smiling
avoid eating with others
have avoided the dentist for fear of being judged
worry people think less of them because of their teeth
see poor oral health as a personal failure
feel pressured to have the perfect smile
blame themselves for the state of their teeth
It has impacted on my career path. I was trained as an actor, but couldn't fill acting roles as my braces didn't fit the roles. It's impacted my mental health on a daily basis.
I have missing teeth and it affects me to the point I haven't had a relationship since they started having problems, and that's almost 10 years.
I'm fully ashamed of my teeth. I can't go out without constantly thinking not to show my teeth, so I hardly open my mouth to talk.
Experiences of oral health stigma cause harm through concealment behaviours that affect socialisation and prevent people from engaging with dental services. Shame-awareness and trauma-informed practice may offer real opportunities to prevent triggering stigma and shame at the dentist.